cpi

Transitory’s Japanese Cousin

By |2018-04-20T12:26:14-04:00April 20th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Thomas Hoenig was President of the Federal Reserve’s Kansas City branch for two decades. He left that post in 2011 to become Vice Chairman of the FDIC. Before that, Mr. Hoenig as a voting member of the FOMC in 2010 cast the lone dissenting vote in each of the eight policy meetings that year (meaning he was against QE2, too). [...]

Inflation Hysteria Takes A Chinese Hit

By |2018-04-11T15:39:44-04:00April 11th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Today is inflation day, as can happen on the occasional month. The US CPI came in without signs of acceleration despite the relinquishment of the Verizon effect on the statistical bucket. Financial markets are unenthused by all this, but you might not know why. The spread between 5- and 30-year Treasury yields, as well as the gap for 2- and [...]

Inflation Hysteria Takes Another Big Hit

By |2018-04-11T11:58:01-04:00April 11th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

As it turns out, those “transitory” inflation factors were worth only about 25 bps on the core CPI rate. This isn’t at all surprising and was as usual entirely predictable. But when you don’t have any answers there is a lamentable tendency toward denial or deliberate evasion, even if that leads toward the ridiculous. Base effects are a part of [...]

Choosing the Right Curves

By |2018-03-20T13:44:29-04:00March 20th, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The background for inflation hysteria was pretty simple. Globally synchronized growth meant acceleration in the US economy which would raise demand for labor. The unemployment rate, faulty as it has been, suggests that any further increase in labor utilization would just have to pressure wages – the competition for workers rises as the marginal supply of them dwindles further downward [...]

Inflation Hysteria(s)

By |2018-03-13T17:02:38-04:00March 13th, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

On May 16, 2000, the FOMC gathered around in Washington to debate taking more extreme measures. For nearly a year, Greenspan’s Federal Reserve had been “raising rates” in the now-familiar pattern. Adjusting their target for interest on federal funds, the Committee had by then increased it at all of the five previous policy meetings, each of them by a further [...]

China Prices Include Lots of Base Effect, Still Undershoots

By |2018-03-09T17:04:12-05:00March 9th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

By far, the easiest to answer for today’s inflation/boom trifecta is China’s CPI. At 2.9% in February 2018, that’s the closest it has come to the government’s definition of price stability (3%) since October 2013. That, in the mainstream, demands the description “hot” if not “sizzling” even though it still undershoots. The primary reason behind the seeming acceleration was a [...]

Questions Not of Success, But of the Effectiveness of Illusion

By |2018-03-06T11:54:09-05:00March 6th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Last week, Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda unleashed a mini-controversy with remarks he now claims were taken somewhat out of context. On March 2, speaking before Japan’s parliament, the central banker sure sounded quite confident: Right now, the members of the policy board and I think that prices will move to reach 2 percent in around fiscal 2019. So [...]

Inflation? Not Even Reflation

By |2018-02-09T11:20:30-05:00February 9th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The conventional interpretation of “reflation” in the second half of 2016 was that it was simply the opening act, the first step in the long-awaiting global recovery. That is what reflation technically means as distinct from recovery; something falls off, and to get back on track first there has to be acceleration to make up that lost difference. There was, [...]

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