eurodollar system

The Shock, The Squeeze, and The Downside

By |2019-08-28T11:47:20-04:00August 28th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Yesterday, Eurostat confirmed that German GDP in Q2 2019 had contracted. Also issuing benchmark revisions, the European government agency found that GDP growth had been slightly better than previously thought at the top of Reflation #3. The last two quarters of 2017 saw the biggest upward revisions. But if Europe’s “boom” really was a little closer to having been a [...]

TIC: The Calm (June) Before the Storm (August)

By |2019-08-16T12:29:24-04:00August 16th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

As far as recent times may be concerned, June 2019 wasn’t that bad of a month. Compared to some this year, it was downright uninteresting. Starting with the UST market, there was a plunge in yields (bad sign for global dollar shortage) in the second half of April and throughout May. June saw more steady trading which continued into July [...]

All You Really Needed Was the Yield Curve

By |2019-08-12T18:31:20-04:00August 12th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It is absolutely amazing the lengths people will go to in order to deny the most straightforward and obvious explanation; to torture and twist plain evidence. That’s the thing about rationalizing, though. The narrative usually matters more than the facts. Take tax reform and interest rates. The problem with tax reform wasn’t actually tax reform. The Tax Cuts and Jobs [...]

The Real Power Behind Currency Wars

By |2019-08-06T16:28:08-04:00August 6th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It’s another one of those things that just blows up the whole convention, another pretty clear sign that the mainstream has it all backward. We are seeing it play out right now with China. The Chinese are being accused of unfair currency manipulation, the sort of “competitive devaluation” that fills whole chapters in the Keynesian Economics textbooks. The idea is [...]

Real Liquidity Cuts Across Many Boundaries; So Does The Lack of It

By |2019-08-02T12:59:58-04:00August 2nd, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Things that happen in one place happen in every place. That’s been the second hardest thing to get people to realize. The first is that central banks are not central. And the reason they aren’t is because of this other factor. It truly is a global system and it’s made that way by its very nature. Credit-based money means that [...]

Ticked About TIC: The Accidental Discovery of Perhaps The Big Bottleneck

By |2019-07-17T16:01:50-04:00July 17th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

From October 2000 to July 2001, the Treasury Department conducted a special survey of users of its Treasury International Capital (TIC) data. Nearly two decades ago, it had become apparent (to some) just how important international dollar flows were to the overall economic and financial landscape. And not just those of the United States. TIC was created ostensibly to aid [...]

Dollar Destruction Potential: From China ‘Outflows’ To The FOMC Considering QE5

By |2019-07-10T17:53:14-04:00July 10th, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Tucked away in a quiet little corner of the BIS publication library, a study was published in the organization’s September 2015 Quarterly Review. One of the biggest mysteries of that time was Chinese “capital flight.” It was breathtaking, and it would only get worse. What was really going on? Many if not most mainstream stories focused on capital restrictions. There [...]

Hard Times In The Eurodollar Straits

By |2019-07-08T16:50:32-04:00July 8th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

As of trading on Friday, federal funds for the third time is now back to above where all this began. For much of 2017 and Reflation #3, the effective federal funds rate (EFF) remained steady at 16 bps above the RRP “floor.” Apart from month-end dumpings, it was consistent and predictable; the best of times, or at least what passes [...]

Toward Rate Cuts: What If The Landmine Was Real?

By |2019-07-01T17:05:31-04:00July 1st, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It was supposed to be the Chinese government who was going to rescue the global economy. Once the rationalizations ended and officials around the world realized there was serious economic weakness building at the end of 2018 instead of a globally synchronized inflationary recovery, the green shoots of 2019 were going to be in one big part a fiscal stimulus [...]

The Road To July Rate Cut Runs Through the Brazilian Zone

By |2019-06-28T18:13:18-04:00June 28th, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The way I look at the global economy, there are basically five different zones. The first is the US and the second is Europe. China might be third on this list but often second if not first in terms of what’s driving marginal changes. In behind those is Japan, not what it once was but still often a bellwether for [...]

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