deflation

First Transitory In Producers, Then More For Consumers, Now A Negative For Import Prices

By |2021-09-15T19:54:58-04:00September 15th, 2021|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The American people were first introduced to the Treasury helicopter in 2008, not 2021. The Bush Administration's “radical” approach to keeping the Great “Recession” from becoming a contraction, obviously, failed spectacularly even though the initial returns had been positive – literally positive in how Q2 ’08 GDP suddenly turned higher as if this was by skilled design. Economists, including those [...]

Bills Flipping The Debt Ceiling

By |2021-09-14T19:46:54-04:00September 14th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The dollar stopped falling on January 6, beginning a reversal which has lasted more than eight months. This forewarning was joined two days later when TIPS breakevens crossed, inverting the 5-year when compared to the 10-year. About a week after that, T-bills.In other words, as I had written up last week, there actually were quite a few contrary indications in [...]

CPI Comes ‘Home’ To The Other Side of Inverted TIPS

By |2021-09-14T16:52:43-04:00September 14th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

January 2021 was, it may have seemed, only the start of something big. Huge. Colossal. Coronavirus vaccines had been discovered, publicized, and rolled out, meaning for the first time a real shot at ending the pandemic. The world could quickly get back to normal, the economy recovering its footing, and between January and that bright future Uncle Sam was going [...]

Honestly Not Easy

By |2021-09-13T18:44:08-04:00September 13th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Central banking’s real monetary power comes from a different kind of printing. We’re all taught and told from the very beginning that it's derived from enjoying the money printer, the ability to stack currency at will. No. In actual fact, monetary policies are all money-less leaving “monetary” authorities to employ instead the press which prints words.Deciding which words, and more [...]

Too Much (about) Taper, Not (yet) Too Many Treasuries

By |2021-09-10T20:01:04-04:00September 10th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Almost universally, the comeback is always QE. Whenever trying to discuss the bond market’s unmovable pessimism in 2021, especially now about six months after reflation ended, people just don’t want to hear about such low (and lower) growth and inflation expectations in nominal yields. No, that’s not deflationary potential, they’d say, it was and is the Fed buying bonds which [...]

The Non-Charitable economics of (Not) Inflation

By |2021-09-10T17:10:32-04:00September 10th, 2021|Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Are giant French freightliners really so generous? Big companies can be known for their philanthropy, of course, but such efforts aren’t usually folded into their own business activities. Generally speaking, the beneficiaries of corporate charity tend to be strangers. If determined giving is actually being applied within the narrower confines of the corporation, that’s not altruïsm but economics (small “e”). [...]

What *Was* It That Changed Around May?

By |2021-09-09T19:54:23-04:00September 9th, 2021|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The inflation hysteria striking the US just hasn’t caught on elsewhere. China is a perfect example of resisting the strain. According to new figures from the Chinese government, consumer price inflation had retreated again during August 2021. The year-over-year change for their CPI was just 0.8%. This was the lowest since March, the fourth straight month of decelerating price changes.China’s [...]

What’s Real Behind Commodities

By |2021-09-07T18:08:01-04:00September 7th, 2021|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Inflation is sustained monetary debasement – money printing, if you prefer – that wrecks consumer prices. It is the other of the evil monetary diseases, the one which is far more visible therefore visceral to the consumers pounded by spiraling costs of bare living. Yet, it is the lesser evil by comparison to deflation which insidiously destroys the labor market [...]

China, Australia, and The European Way Into Reverse Repo

By |2021-09-01T20:19:50-04:00September 1st, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

We are going to start here with Europe before heading to Australia and then getting to China – and then currency. Why the ECB? It is going through the same pangs of dissatisfaction as its cousin the Federal Reserve had last summer. Like the Fed in 2020, Europe’s central bank in 2021 has climbed to the end of its grand [...]

Not Black Mouth To Bad Mouth The Global Causes of Transitory Inflation

By |2021-08-31T19:32:38-04:00August 31st, 2021|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Apparently, analysts were shocked when the Conference Board reported earlier today that its measure of consumer confidence, its own bread and butter, in the name, after all, dropped by a rather substantial eleven-plus points in August. And that was on top of a four-point downward revision to July. The new level of 113.8 compares to average expectations for ~124.0. Therefore, [...]

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