deflation

The Third Of The Transitory Inflation Trifecta And Today’s Surprisingly Consistent Ugly Surprise

By |2021-08-13T17:44:40-04:00August 13th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Fitting, in a way, that with so much having come out this week, the 10-year Treasury yield would end it at almost exactly the same price/yield as it began. In between, another epic CPI, ’74-style PPI commodities, and now rounding out the BLS inflation trifecta today was the fourth straight double-digit gain (year-over-year) in import prices. To the latter, the [...]

CPI’s At Fives Yet Treasury Auctions

By |2021-08-11T20:01:39-04:00August 11th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

A momentous day, for sure, but one lost in what would turn out to be a seemingly endless sea of them. October 8, 2008, right in the thick of the world’s first global financial crisis (how could it have been global, surely not subprime mortgages?) the Federal Reserve took center stage; or tried to. Having bungled Lehman, botched AIG, and [...]

Inflation Review: How The ‘Best Jobs Market In Decades’ Couldn’t Deliver

By |2021-08-10T17:49:21-04:00August 10th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Money printing. Overheating. Going from an economy stuck in the mud to one rocketing ahead seemingly in the blink of an eye. Careless government officials steadfastly forecasting Goldilocks, surely whistling past the consumer price graveyard of stagflation misery.Long believed dead, that seventies Inflation Monster relit maybe by necessity but now on the loose lurking just beneath the surface, ready to [...]

Gold Slammed Early Asia In Trade With China Trade Then Inflation

By |2021-08-09T19:52:52-04:00August 9th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

This one wasn’t nearly so perfect as the scramble for collateral had been a few Tuesdays ago. Last night’s, however, did have a sizable, visible contribution from the gold marketplace. That’s a significant tell even if it didn’t necessarily correlate by the minute with T-bills and other collateral numbers.In this instance if only because the gold “slam”, which was enormous, [...]

Studying, Analyzing Reflation Templates and Their Legs

By |2021-08-04T19:53:37-04:00August 4th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In one sense, we have a template to follow, two potentially, but in another there may not be one this time. I’m talking about reflation and how it plays out specifically in bond yields because these have been among the most reliable indicators. Economists and central bankers unaware of this wealth of information right in front of them, right here [...]

Go Early, Go Fast? Go Deflation

By |2021-08-03T18:16:01-04:00August 3rd, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Go early and go fast. This was the message FOMC Governor Christopher Waller wanted to send to the CNBC audience watching his interview yesterday on that channel. He was referring to the possible taper of QE6. In Waller’s view, if the US economy lives up to its current hype in the form of two more blowout jobs numbers, those would [...]

Another Big ‘Ide’ To Add To Deflation’s March

By |2021-08-02T19:47:57-04:00August 2nd, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There’s another foreign angle to the grave misconceptions about what overseas financial entities are doing, and are made to do, with specifically US Treasury assets (and overall US$ assets more broadly). The American public, anyway, has wrongly been led to believe that those outside the US must hate the US and its dollar; at least its recklessly spendthrift government. None [...]

Diverging Inflation Numbers, For How Much Longer?

By |2021-07-30T19:23:00-04:00July 30th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Germany’s flash July 2021 inflation estimate came in hot yesterday, boosted mostly by comparisons to July 2020’s VAT-free situation. That country’s CPI is a robust sounding 3.8% year-over-year this month, though only 3.1% in its flash HICP terms. Despite Deutschland’s oversized contribution and influence, Eurostat reports today how for Europe as a whole there was a whole lot of little [...]

Inflation Estimates (PCE) *Totally* Overshadowed By Benchmark Income Revisions, And The (Deflationary) Implications of Them

By |2021-07-30T17:37:30-04:00July 30th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Of course inflation numbers, the PCE Deflators for June 2021, but first in the same report as those the BEA also released its various data on income and spending. In the former category, income, we’ll find a big reason why this deviation for consumer prices most likely ends up as temporary. And before we can get to that, big benchmark [...]

Leading Out From Japan

By |2021-07-28T19:14:27-04:00July 28th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Admittedly, there isn’t much economic data released in the back half of every month. So, we’re sort of stretching our gaze into the second (maybe third) tier. But in this case, it’s just by way of reinforcing much what we already know and further what’s been suspected. Over in Japan, the government’s Cabinet Office gathers surveys, cross tabulates results and [...]

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