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Global Credit Markets Have Proclaimed An End To The Recovery

By |2014-12-12T18:14:26-05:00December 12th, 2014|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

The amount of credit market fireworks this week is only surpassed by those of October 15. Everywhere you look, credit markets are not just growing bearish but, as I said earlier in the week, bearish in comparison with past crisis periods. The past few days have surpassed even that observation, making credit now a fast-moving indicator of still nothing good. [...]

Monetarism Destroys Money

By |2014-12-10T11:10:55-05:00December 10th, 2014|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Most people have at least a passing familiarity with the basic concepts of finance. These are intuitive aspects that count almost like Platonic qualities of “truth”, existing as almost transcendent reality upon which human construction is based. In this particular case I am talking about money and time value. The reason a yield curve takes the shape that it does [...]

The ECB Boiler Room, Part 2

By |2014-12-09T17:20:36-05:00December 9th, 2014|Bonds, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Just as China grapples with the scale of economic waste induced by heavy monetarism, Europe has that old 2011 feeling again of financial waste. Mario Draghi’s July 2012 promise to “do whatever it takes” was taken by banks and financial “investors” as a free-for-all to ride severely discounted sovereign debt to tremendous profit. They did so much of that the [...]

Draghi Knows The Truth, ‘Last Bullet’ Better As Threat

By |2014-12-04T10:36:52-05:00December 4th, 2014|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If “investors” have notoriously short attention spans, then surely those in and of Europe are making a case to be classified as something entirely new, different, and worse. It is now just one day shy of six months ago that the latest central bank schematic was unleashed to the universal cheer of “markets” and economists alike. The ECB wasn’t fooling [...]

About That ECB QE

By |2014-12-03T15:54:55-05:00December 3rd, 2014|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

As the Eurozone absorbs yet another economic blow, the urge to engage in even more historic debasement via the ECB has heightened, to say the least. The talk about a European “QE” is near endless, as that is about all that is left for them to do. That is itself a powerful statement, lost upon those that are calling for [...]

These Are Also Warnings

By |2014-12-02T16:30:01-05:00December 2nd, 2014|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Back at the end of August, it was becoming clear that there was a growing sense of maybe not distrust but far less blind faith emanating from credit markets all over the world. Without a single epicenter it has been far more difficult to simply side step all economic permutations as singularly important, rather the culmination of increasing worry is [...]

Shortening The Road With ‘QE’ Speak

By |2014-11-17T16:31:58-05:00November 17th, 2014|Bonds, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

Sovereign debt is the tangible pivot by which everything in Europe depends. That speaks not just to persistent fiscal imbalances that remain, years later, unresolved, but the unspeakable financial equivalent to a doomsday scenario. The damage to the European economy from the last financial panic is slowly being revealed (as with the unrequited and un-criticized promises of central banks), which [...]

From Unqualified ‘Savior’ To Afterthought In Only Five Months

By |2014-11-17T15:51:49-05:00November 17th, 2014|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

China’s figures last week were not “helpful” to the “global growth” narrative, and now Japan and Europe have contributed their share of turning sentiment. It seems as if credit markets might actually be on to something with all this bearishness standing in stark contrast to stock markets that just don’t care about much except self-feeding participation and corporate indulgence. There [...]

Not Just The Franc Showing Euro Concerns

By |2014-11-14T18:29:24-05:00November 14th, 2014|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With Europe reporting GDP, reactions have been somewhat varied. In some places, it was taken as not as bad as feared, while others were downright cheered by a lack of total collapse, as if that is now the standard for economic progress. Since GDP tends to be noisy in the short run, the major components, the economic base, continues to [...]

Big Changes In Central Bank Theory Pressing Changes in Operations

By |2014-11-10T12:38:29-05:00November 10th, 2014|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The important point about doctrinaire ideology is its utmost rigidity. For the longest time that was relevant to the operations of central banks, as they practiced what might have been the most modern version of a new religion. From the end of the gold standard in the 1960’s (1971 was simply the last step in the process) until only recently [...]

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