eurodollar

Inelasticity Not Outflows

By |2016-01-25T16:00:52-05:00January 25th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

More and more the media are finally starting to get the message about Chinese liquidity and its tendency for or against “devaluation.” For their part, the PBOC has been quite clear about its intentions all along; it was only the impenetrable fog of orthodox economics that prevented more widespread acknowledgement and understanding. There are no “reserves” at least not in [...]

If The PBOC Is Pegging Again, This Would Be Why

By |2016-01-22T18:57:06-05:00January 22nd, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The November update for TIC figures shows relatively few surprises given what was witnessed November into December then January. The heavy downdraft of October was somewhat reversed, and even the official sector was probably less strained (outside of China) than at any time in 2015. But these are reactive symptoms to the greater problem of “dollar” availability, so the most [...]

Why It Will Continue, Continued

By |2016-01-21T18:11:50-05:00January 21st, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With quarterly earnings we get quarterly bank earnings. Interest in them should be heightened by all that has happened since June 2014. And it is, only for seemingly the wrong reasons. Deutsche Bank, the latest, reported shockingly negative preliminary results which only continued the trend. Even though the media largely gets it backwards, at some point as enough time passes [...]

Tsunamis, Runs and Rubles

By |2016-01-21T16:48:01-05:00January 21st, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It is said that a tsunami announces itself when the ocean suddenly and for no apparent reason recedes back farther than anyone could imagine. Left stranded are everything from beachgoers to fishing vessels of all sizes and even marine wildlife suddenly exposed to the open air. The spectacle creates a dangerous curiosity which the naturally curious humankind has difficulty avoiding. [...]

The True And Hidden Menace of Liquidations

By |2016-01-20T16:50:50-05:00January 20th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Today’s radical reversal in stocks notwithstanding, the continuing hits of liquidations are not achieving their settled ends. In purely financial terms, the entire process of liquidation is to renew a settled state. Local imbalances force restriction of financial resources (what used to be money but now is something recognizable as such but truly not money) which triggers a cascade of [...]

A Strong Indication of What Changed In January For the PBOC

By |2016-01-20T10:06:00-05:00January 19th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The official word from China, in the sense that whispers and unofficial back channels counts for any kind of imprimatur, was that last week’s huge surge in offshore yuan money rates was at the request of the PBOC using state banks to squeeze those damned speculators. It was perhaps an usual step to take in that the PBOC’s major efforts [...]

Coping and Denial; China and PBOC

By |2016-01-19T11:41:40-05:00January 19th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

China’s economic update for December and Q4 were uniformly ugly. GDP fell to 6.8% and 6.9% for the full year. Industrial production was back below 6%, estimated at just 5.9% and once more denying all those that claimed November’s slight uptick was the start of renewal. Retail sales disappointed at 11.1%, down from 11.2% in November (no difference) while Fixed [...]

We Know How This Ends, Part 2

By |2016-01-18T17:25:55-05:00January 18th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Part 1 is HERE. In March 1969, while Buba was busy in the quicksand of its swaps and forward dollar interventions, Netherlands Bank (the Dutch central bank) had instructed commercial banks in Holland to pull back funds from the eurodollar market in order to bring up their liquidity positions which had dwindled dangerously during this increasing currency chaos.  At the [...]

We Know How This Ends

By |2016-01-18T17:31:15-05:00January 18th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The finance ministers and representatives of central banks from the world’s ten largest “capitalist” economies gathered in Bonn, West Germany on November 20, 1968. The global financial system was then enthralled by a third major currency crisis of the past year or so and there was great angst and disagreement as to what to do about it. While sterling had [...]

Full Appreciation of Non-Neutrality Accounts For A Lot

By |2016-01-15T18:26:18-05:00January 15th, 2016|Markets|

It’s one of those myths that persist no matter how many times it fails to live up to itself. Perhaps that is due to the fact that it originates in simplifying assumptions that allow econometric models nothing more than avoiding disqualifying singularities (infinity) in the equations. I am thinking about the assumption that is widely used in orthodox theory that [...]

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