eurodollar system

No Flight To Recognize Shortage

By |2020-05-20T15:19:25-04:00May 20th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If there’s been one small measure of progress, and a needed one, it has been the mainstream finally pushing commentary into the right category. Back in ’08, during the worst of GFC1 you’d hear it all described as “flight to safety.” That, however, didn’t correctly connote the real nature of what was behind the global economy’s dramatic wreckage. Flight to [...]

Overseas Dollar Swaps Are Not As Overseas As You Think

By |2020-05-18T16:44:34-04:00May 18th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

People quite often want to know what I have against the Fed’s swaps. To begin with, they are sourced by bank reserves. My co-host partner Emil Kalinowski likes to say these latter are the equivalent of laundromat tokens, an analogy I can at least get behind. They are monetary in appearance but of (extremely) limited use. Maybe a more comprehensive [...]

The Big Picture’s Going To Need More Than Magic Words

By |2020-05-14T19:20:26-04:00May 14th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

What connects March 2020 with February 2008 as well as the Crash of ’87 all then with the Great Contraction which initiated the Great Depression? If you said economic and financial chaos, you’d be partly right. There wasn’t really much or any of that in 1987, though there was with the other three. People including politicians and central bankers don’t [...]

Weimar Ben Didn’t Happen, So Now Weimar Jay?

By |2020-05-04T17:26:01-04:00May 4th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Anna Jacobson Schwartz often gets buried under the mountains of study Milton Friedman conducted on his own. Contrary to what some, perhaps many, might think, Friedman didn’t write A Monetary History by himself. Anna Schwartz was his co-author for what would become one of the most important volumes of economic scholarship of the entire 20th century.Pretty much every central bank [...]

Being Forced To Be More Precise About The Most Serious Terms

By |2020-05-01T18:49:36-04:00May 1st, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

He called it “unfair competition.” That’s one way to describe it, surely not the proper way. But who could blame the guy? After all, these were not normal times though at the time hardly anyone had yet realized it.James J. Davis was the second person to hold the title Secretary of Labor. Appointed by Warren Harding, he began his tenure [...]

Can You Quota The World Into Recovery?

By |2020-04-29T19:25:56-04:00April 29th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Saudi Arabia once burned through the bond market on par with demand for Argentina’s paper. During the 2016-17 globally synchronized growth-inspire Eurobond binge, the country made up for its lost oil revenues (oil crash and all) with dollar-denominated, offshore debt flotations. These merely stabilized the country’s forex reserves after they had collapsed (by a third) alongside benchmark Brent crude prices [...]

COT Black: No Love For Super-Secret Models

By |2020-04-27T18:13:03-04:00April 27th, 2020|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

As I’ve said, it is a threefold failure of statistical models. The first being those which showed the economy was in good to great shape at the start of this thing. Widely used and even more widely cited, thanks to Jay Powell and his 2019 rate cuts plus “repo” operations the calculations suggested the system was robust.Because of this set [...]

The Fallen Kings & The Bond Throne of Collateral

By |2020-04-21T18:54:57-04:00April 21st, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There is no schadenfreude at times like these, no time to dance on anyone’s grave. Victory laps are a luxury that only central bankers take – always prematurely. The world already coming apart because of GFC1, what comes next with GFC2 and then whatever follows it? Another “bond king” has thrown in the towel. Franklin Templeton’s candidate for the title [...]

Three Quarters of a Trillion In Three Weeks, And Bill Yields Are Down Again

By |2020-04-16T18:48:03-04:00April 16th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Hold all the congratulations. Jay Powell is, with a huge assist from the financial media, trying to pre-empt what comes next by taking a premature victory lap. The Fed isn’t just your central bank it is your friend. The amount of pure propaganda being put out lately is understandable if still disgusting. March was a good month to include [...]

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