dollar short

A Long Dollar Story: China’s Short Profits, Prices, and Producers

By |2018-09-10T16:59:18-04:00September 10th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For the first half of the Great “Recession”, China and the rest of the EM world seemed immune. It was American subprime mortgages that we were told was causing all the problems, and if European banks had somehow gotten themselves entangled in the rotten real estate mess so much the better for where growth was invulnerable. This first instance of [...]

Yet Another Lesson In Nightmares

By |2018-08-29T11:15:17-04:00August 29th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I don’t know how many different ways I can write this. Reserves are not insurance against monetary reversal, they are the calamity. If you have them, that only means you have a problem. And if you have a lot of them, well. The Financial Times yesterday writes again about Argentina. No matter what’s thrown at that country, nothing will staunch [...]

TIC in June 2018: The Questionable Collateral Aftermath of May 29

By |2018-08-17T17:34:53-04:00August 17th, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There isn’t really any doubt what happened on May 29. It was a global collateral call. Bonds all over Earth were hugely bid, especially paper in Germany and America – the pristine of the pristine. This is pure liquidity risk, meaning that no matter your feelings on the long-term solvency of the US government (or Germany’s ability to maintain the [...]

When Central Banks DON’T Print

By |2018-08-17T11:41:30-04:00August 17th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

We all know, or we think we do, what happens when central banks print money. There are any number of historical images from which we can refresh our collective memory. Weimar Germany usually comes to mind, as does Venezuela or Zimbabwe in recent times. But what about the opposite? It sounds absurd. No government officials in their right mind would [...]

The Quarks and Quirks of CNY’s Big Drop

By |2018-07-25T13:04:08-04:00July 25th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In 1962, physicist Wolfgang Panofsky finally obtained funding from the Atomic Energy Commission. As a faculty member at Stanford University he wanted the federal government to fund his monster. Dubbed Project M, for monster, Dr. Panofsky was seeking a method for scientists to obtain evidence for what was really going on inside the atom. The project was really a linear [...]

TIC Confirms Pretty Much Everything

By |2018-07-18T17:39:55-04:00July 18th, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Russian ruble has fared far and away much better than its EM peers. Compared to something like the Brazilian real, there is no comparison. The ruble has been relatively steady following an initial drop in April with the imposition of sanctions. April 19 came and went, and while that date is displayed prominently across all the key currencies it [...]

The Dreaded Vote of Confidence

By |2018-07-03T11:50:35-04:00July 3rd, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Chinese officials are getting nervous. Everyone knows that whenever your favorite sports team struggles and fans are calling for the head coach’s head, any owner or general manager who then issues the dreaded (from the coach’s perspective) vote of confidence is essentially sealing his fate. PBOC Governor Yi Gang issued a similar sort of statement today. CNY is in freefall, [...]

The Deeper Red of JPY and WTI

By |2018-07-02T17:00:35-04:00July 2nd, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There are several factors missing from the latest eurodollar rout. Well, not really missing so much as sitting this one out to this point in time. We knew things were really getting serious in 2015 when the Japanese yen joined the currency parade. Only it didn’t fall as others had, JPY rather rose very much against the Bank of Japan. [...]

Already Back In The Red?

By |2018-06-28T17:35:33-04:00June 28th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In July 2014, then-Federal Reserve Chairman Janet Yellen testified before Congress. It was the usual Humphrey-Hawkins stuff, except in this instance at that particular time there was every reason to suspect things were finally changing. The unemployment rate, in particular, was sinking like a stone dropped in a pond. Some additional economic indicators signaled perhaps the pathway toward substantial improvement [...]

It’s A Dollar Double Whammy, Just Not Theirs

By |2018-06-05T16:06:09-04:00June 5th, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

First it was inflation. No, it was nuclear war in Korea. Then something about T-bills and government debt. And the ECB tapering while others were, too. Of course, before any of those there was 2a7. There’s always something, it seems, something different every time. Maybe it’s not any of them? Small “e” economics will survive where Economics will not. The [...]

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