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Global Trade Confirmations; Economy As Finance

By |2015-12-08T12:35:56-05:00December 8th, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

China’s trade estimates continue the trend of the global economy pushing closer to recession, assuming that it is not already there. We know that the lower part of the global supply chain below Chinese manufacturing and assembly, the resources and materials flow, has already been pushed beyond simple recession in some places, like Brazil, into defining a new disastrous economic [...]

China Uses or Loses More ‘Dollars’?

By |2015-12-07T18:11:19-05:00December 7th, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

While some are shocked that China may have “used” a huge amount of “reserves” in November, that is only because so many myths and anachronisms continue to abound in the mainstream and beyond. Any conversation about forex in the context of central banks and national government agencies is one that still views money from a traditional standpoint – as if [...]

The Dramatically Shifted Baseline

By |2015-12-07T16:49:42-05:00December 7th, 2015|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Crude oil prices are exhibiting all the signs of an increasingly difficult funding environment. The front end of the futures curve is being bent dramatically in relation to even close maturities just outside the next few months. Such contango is the obvious imprint of finance, though that is not to say that economic expectations are neutral in the curve. Far [...]

7 Macro-Drivers for Capital Markets in 2016

By |2015-12-06T19:21:47-05:00December 6th, 2015|Commodities, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

Global Growth Recession risks are low and growth should improve in 2016. Excess supply is especially apparent in the raw materials/commodities sectors. This state of overcapacity/supply and a strong dollar combined from 2014-2015 to create an environment of falling prices and sluggish growth in global manufacturing. The services sector continues to perform well. Continued expansion in the US coupled with a recovering [...]

More Definition For The Junk Connections

By |2015-12-04T17:47:02-05:00December 4th, 2015|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If the junk bond bubble was this week’s most visible inducement toward illiquidity, there have been more than enough indications that might corroborate and explain. With a few more days trading, the huge jump in BofAML’s CCC junk index rate has been confirmed – with another albeit smaller surge again yesterday. At now 16.74%, that is significantly above the prior [...]

Economists’ Canada Problem

By |2015-12-01T11:29:15-05:00December 1st, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Despite everything that happened in July and August throughout the financial world, there remained a tendency to simply dismiss it as anomalous. That was curious in and of itself, but that the global liquidations then were not isolated but rather the latest in a continuing string of “odd” events strains such determined dimness. We have arrived at a point in [...]

The Wrong Kind of Fertile Ground

By |2015-11-30T11:39:32-05:00November 30th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

On December 11, 2014, spot WTI closed at $60.01, down sharply from $76.52 the week before that Thanksgiving. In the space of only a few weeks, oil prices had collapsed far more than anyone thought possible; and yet there was very little urgency to the outcome. Economists, in particular, parroted throughout the media, were quick to assert both a supply [...]

Things Everybody Knows…

By |2015-11-28T19:45:17-05:00November 28th, 2015|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

It ain't so much the things we don't know that get us into trouble. It's the things we know that just ain't so.   Mark Twain Mark Twain probably wasn't thinking of investors when he wrote those words, but truer ones have rarely been written. Investors routinely become overconfident in their assessment of economic and market conditions. They assume that [...]

The Kingdom Offers Less Oil

By |2015-11-25T16:33:51-05:00November 25th, 2015|Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

While the media remains fixed on supply, the rest of the financial complex is prepared elsewhere. On Monday, Saudi Arabia announced what the mainstream has been waiting for (and often blatantly demanding) since the summer “rebound” faded into August liquidations. Given the mythical status of Saudi supply, this was the one country thought to be the only possible savior. Crude [...]

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