employment

The Monetary Root

By |2016-02-05T19:28:59-05:00February 5th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

How did the world get this way? I don’t mean the oncoming recession, if that is indeed, as it appears, the economy’s fate. How did the payroll statistics ever attain this kind of deference and even religious zeal? U.S. manufacturing is shrinking, corporate profits are declining and goods are piling up on warehouse shelves. Those trends have elevated concern that [...]

Full Wages

By |2016-02-05T13:28:39-05:00February 5th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Despite the disappointing headline Establishment Survey estimate, those inclined to believe the payroll report as an overall economic narrative had two fallback issues. U.S. employment gains slowed more than expected in January as the boost to hiring from unseasonably mild weather faded, but surging wages and an unemployment rate at an eight-year low suggested the labor market recovery remains firm. [...]

Full Employment

By |2016-02-05T12:27:10-05:00February 5th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The headline Establishment Survey number disappointed at just 151k in January. The figure does not represent the actual amount of jobs gained, of course, since employment in January is typically about 3 million less than December. What that estimate represents is a combination of imputations about seasonality (comparing the actual change in the data set to the “typical” decline December [...]

Fix The Error

By |2016-01-20T17:22:09-05:00January 20th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

One follow up point to this morning’s missive about why the economy seems to be converging in recession rather than full and blossoming recovery: There must be something said about the manner of redistribution in this “cycle” as different from all others. In other words, the Fed has been attempting greater and greater redistribution efforts via monetary interference ever since [...]

The End of the Bifurcated Economy Is Not What It Was Supposed To Be

By |2016-01-20T11:14:39-05:00January 20th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For something that central bankers and economists were so sure wasn’t ever going to be troubling, oil seems to have become something of a communicable financial disease at the outset of 2016. If 2015 was somewhat sour and disappointing, 2016 was supposed to leave no doubt; it is, just not in the manner predicted. This morning’s headlines tell you all [...]

All That’s Left Is The Cleanup

By |2016-01-15T11:51:55-05:00January 15th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The scale of the inventory bloat in the latter half of 2015 was perplexing. By any reasonable standard, it doesn’t make any sense that businesses would be so bold as to almost ignore sales (and this applies at each level of the supply chain). The only way that it could have possibly occurred was businesses setting aside what was happening [...]

The Inescapable Trap of the ‘Dollar Short’; Brazil Edition

By |2015-12-30T15:46:35-05:00December 30th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For bond ratings agencies, finding a bottom is pretty much their job. In other words, they are supposed to map out and understand, as best as may be possible through regressions and equations, the forces that might define a worst case. By direct implication, a worst case probability is determined by at least some ray of hope, some perhaps buried [...]

Bi-Weekly Economic Review

By |2015-11-20T20:55:46-05:00November 20th, 2015|Alhambra Research, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Economic Reports Scorecard – 11/6/15 to 11/20/15 The economic data continues to come in largely less than expected with the manufacturing/industrial parts of the economy faring worst. In what may be a developing trend, housing starts were less than expected and with last home sales reports makes for a short string of weaker reports. Generally, real estate has been trending [...]

Job Openings and JOLTS Crossed Signals

By |2015-11-12T15:26:00-05:00November 12th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The updated JOLTS numbers for September just confirmed more nonsense on the part of the BLS. Job openings continue to be all their own while the rest of the data series, even as the whole is indexed to the CES, at best stagnates. On every other count, including hires and quits, there is something drastically different in the US labor [...]

The Conspicuous Temperature Gradient of Finicky US Consumers

By |2015-11-11T10:30:23-05:00November 11th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Janet Yellen and orthodox economists claim that the economy can only be gaining, and that word is taken, on faith, as if some updated, modern gold standard for meaning. No matter the contrary in actual evidence and observation, the “word” remains as if diktat were the only employ. It has produced some very strange dichotomies, particularly of late, where those [...]

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