eurodollar system

The Chinese Money Behind Global Inflation Baseball

By |2021-05-18T19:28:16-04:00May 18th, 2021|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

China’s economy is nowhere near recovered from 2020’s steep recession, yet, contrary to textbook demands, the Chinese central bank is winding down its support. This is especially important given that monetary policy last year hadn’t actually been all that supportive to begin with (see below). The two major money outlets, currency and bank reserves, were allowed a noticeable yet only [...]

Another Hundred Trillion For The Library

By |2021-04-28T20:06:17-04:00April 28th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Words have meaning for a reason, to convey precise ideas easily and readily understood by the reader or listener. If you use the term “stimulus”, as its root already suggests you’d expect something to be stimulated by whatever is being classified using this specific grouping of letters/sounds. Context rounds out the meaning.For the last twenty years, you’d have been wrong [...]

The Warehouse Gap Does Much To Fill In Why There Were Never Too Many Treasuries

By |2021-04-23T19:38:21-04:00April 23rd, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Long bond futures, open interest. There really shouldn’t be much to glean from just the raw count of US Treasury futures contracts at any given time, yet throughout the past quarter-century you could tell something was up whenever this particular contract’s open interest went up. More of long bond OI, the more it seemed (and still seems) trouble lurked (lurks).I [...]

Yes, Curves Have Been Forced To Speak Japanese

By |2021-03-31T18:32:23-04:00March 31st, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Economists’ R*, or R-star, is a fiction. It’s one that they came up with after-the-fact to try to explain why their policies didn’t actually work the way policymakers had initially promised. While in public, officials still speak glowingly of each QE, one after another after another, in private they know it deserves absolutely no praise. Study after study has shown [...]

The Simple Equation

By |2021-03-29T18:11:54-04:00March 29th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

My entire premise was to make this mockingly simple. Econometrics demands mathematical precision yet always comes up empty because its calculations, no matter how elegantly complex, proceed from the falsest of subjective assumptions. It won’t matter how awesome the computing power if the thing you’re trying to compute doesn’t work or act the way you believe (because everyone says so [...]

Kiwi Busted QE And Its Relation To The Reflation Story

By |2021-03-24T18:33:32-04:00March 24th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In theory, it goes like this: QE or any sort of large-scale asset purchase (LSAP) undertaken by a central bank is needed during times of trouble in order to reduce interest rates in general. Buying bonds seems like it would lower yields, and lower yields mean more accommodative credit, therefore a boost to the real economy.So simple, straightforward, and intuitive, [...]

OK NYMEX, Beginning To Notice The Fine Print?

By |2021-03-23T17:37:08-04:00March 23rd, 2021|Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Is it a building case of/for selling the news? Another substantial down day in the oil market brings the total slide to just more than 13% (since March 5). Hardly anything earth-shaking on its own, not with the WTI front month futures contract gaining an impressive 85% since the end of October. During those four and a half months, the [...]

What *Must* Lie Beyond the M’s

By |2021-03-11T17:19:49-05:00March 10th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

This particular part of the hysteria is understandable, if thoroughly unconvincing. Forget the Fed and its bank reserves for moment, whatever those are now and then. The banking system is where it’s at, monetarily speaking, and it is the banking system which seems to have lost its handle on the money printing lever. If we’re focused beyond bank reserves and [...]

Standard Textbook Dollar, Or Eurodollar Standard?

By |2021-03-08T20:06:11-05:00March 8th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It’s standard textbook stuff. Convention has it that “capital flows” are determined by the portfolio effects of interest rate differentials. Quite simply, if yields aren’t very high for low risk US instruments (like UST’s) or their European counterparts, fixed income managers must go hunting for yields overseas in Emerging Markets who offer fatter returns by comparison. Thus, “capital” is said [...]

Yet Another Reminder: Listen To Xi Spell It All Out

By |2021-03-05T19:54:09-05:00March 5th, 2021|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I keep saying to take them at their word. For years now, China’s top Communists have been upfront and honest in a way that compared to what goes on in Western nominally-free democracies would be refreshing. Don’t get me wrong; this is no way implies, nor do I claim, that authoritarian thuggishness can be superior. Rather, this is the small(ish) [...]

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