dollar

Does It Matter If Oil Prices Have Already Traded In The Same Pattern Just One Year Offset?

By |2016-03-17T18:48:56-04:00March 17th, 2016|Commodities, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

From June 2014 until late January 2015, oil prices (WTI) fell about 60%. From June 2015 until late January 2016, oil prices (WTI) fell about 60%. The exact track each annual trading history took to achieve those results is different (2014-15 much more straight ahead and persistent; 2015-16 jagged and irregular), but you can’t deny the repetition in both the [...]

The Remarkable Inferences About the PBOC’s Unremarkable February Balance Sheet

By |2016-03-16T12:33:00-04:00March 16th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The PBOC’s balance sheet was relatively quiet in February, with no large moves on either side of its ledger. In fact, these minor shifts appeared to be more so adjustments than the more extreme efforts the central bank had become used to undertaking. The heavy lifting was accomplished in January at least as far was what is visible, leaving February’s [...]

The Search For Cause

By |2016-03-14T18:47:45-04:00March 14th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If China is most representative of the current state of the “dollar” economy, Brazil is surely most representative of its worst case. The country’s economy has been like China in slowing down steadily over the past few years, but unlike China it has descended already into a nightmarish level of distress. In other words, Brazil already has a Great Recession [...]

Crude and Crude China Financials

By |2016-03-09T17:19:35-05:00March 9th, 2016|Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Crude oil prices in the US have jumped back up to above $38 again, leading various financial correlations toward much less depressing interpretations (chiefly stocks). That in turn has allowed the proliferation of the “it’s all over” narrative despite fundamental accounts that continue to suggest otherwise. Being the sharpest rally in WTI since really last April, these reflections appear to [...]

More Eurodollar Anecdotes On Shriveling

By |2016-04-06T10:09:11-04:00March 1st, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Barclays has received all the media attention in the past few days after announcing its exit from Africa. Specifically, the bank intends to divest enough of its 62% stake in the Africa unit so as to skirt tougher UK regulations intended to “ringfence” domestic operations; to keep the global bank from potential global financial horrors recurring and devastating once more [...]

Adding Liquidity Into The Subtraction

By |2016-02-29T12:10:13-05:00February 29th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The PBOC surprised some by lowering the reserve requirement for the Chinese banking system this morning. That marks the sixth reduction since February 4 last year, totaling 350 bps (the reduction on April 19 was 100 bps). By orthodox calculations, that should have added about RMB 2.45 trillion in new “liquidity” as banks freed from holding reserves would have forwarded [...]

Not Fixed

By |2016-02-25T16:43:11-05:00February 25th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

All the warning signs were there, especially the backup in the CNY exchange rate. Chinese stocks had stood for a good run while the PBOC had flooded internal channels, but how much of that was real liquidity versus the appearance of stuffing funding into the narrow coffers of the largest state run banks? Increasingly it seemed far more the latter [...]

Complicated And Often Tortured Plumbing Behind ‘Selling UST’

By |2016-02-17T19:17:06-05:00February 17th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

While the eurodollar system has attained the full functions of a banking system in parallel to (and in many ways superseding) the onshore dollar version, at its core remains its primary purpose as a means to solve global payments. It is the idea of the dollar replacing gold and sterling, the reserve currency. The difference in recognizing the eurodollar as [...]

Another Estimate of ‘Dollar’ Destruction

By |2016-02-17T12:38:32-05:00February 17th, 2016|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

December was one of the worst months on record for foreign dealing with the “dollar.” The latest TIC update further confirms why January was under such persistent and heavy liquidation pressure in almost every corner. There was a record monthly amount of “selling UST’s” in foreign channels, a dearth of private “dollar” activity and, perhaps most important of all, bank [...]

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