eurodollar

‘Strong Dollar’ Makes Its Appearance

By |2015-11-25T17:31:44-05:00November 25th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Durable goods orders and shipments were estimated still consistent with the depressive environment that has “unexpectedly” lingered for the whole of 2015. Year-over-year, new orders for durable goods fell 4.13% while shipments contracted by 3.74%. That is the ninth straight decline in orders and the fourth in shipments (and five out of the last six months). The 6-month averages in [...]

The Kingdom Offers Less Oil

By |2015-11-25T16:33:51-05:00November 25th, 2015|Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

While the media remains fixed on supply, the rest of the financial complex is prepared elsewhere. On Monday, Saudi Arabia announced what the mainstream has been waiting for (and often blatantly demanding) since the summer “rebound” faded into August liquidations. Given the mythical status of Saudi supply, this was the one country thought to be the only possible savior. Crude [...]

‘Dollar’ View of Demand

By |2015-11-24T17:45:16-05:00November 24th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If China is struggling with the various facets of the interconnected nature of eurodollar function, then we don’t have to go far to see that in almost perfect clarity. By many accounts, funding and liquidity remain highly disturbed and becoming more uniformly so. From gold to francs to copper to junk debt, pricing reflects more so a combined economic and [...]

And Still It Comes

By |2015-11-24T15:24:02-05:00November 24th, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Very quietly, the PBOC has been fixing its middle exchange rate against the dollar higher and higher (in dollar terms). Today’s reference rate was 6.3895, up from 6.378 a week ago, with the CNY exchange coming close to 6.40 again for the first time since the disastrous period in late September. Unlike August, there has not been the flood of [...]

Another Study In Contrasts

By |2015-11-23T18:27:31-05:00November 23rd, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In April 2008, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe was miffed. The country’s central bank governor, Dr. Gideon Gono, produced its first quarter monetary policy statement by reminding anyone who might read it that his actions were being duplicated the world over. Apparently still smarting over criticism by his central bank peers, Dr. Gono, an honorary degree, was more disturbed by [...]

If You Don’t Learn…

By |2015-11-23T13:38:55-05:00November 23rd, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Monetarism, at its core, is relatively quite simple. It would have to be, standing upon ground of nothing much more than generic concepts for almost every important economic factor. But all of it can be distilled into the idea of money supply; given “enough”, the economy will thrive. That view includes some of the worst of conditions so long as [...]

Looking To The Future

By |2015-11-20T11:27:33-05:00November 20th, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The problem with Brazil is that its central bank has done everything the monetary textbook requires of it. Setting aside that Banco itself is a literal mishmash of public and private interests (what central bank isn’t?), the freefall in the Brazilian economy of late is simply puzzling to the mainstream. Unlike the US or Europe, at least the descent is [...]

The Federal Sand Castle

By |2015-11-19T11:45:48-05:00November 19th, 2015|Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Following up from yesterday’s nod toward monetary policy irrationality, the “relevant” markets today continue to profess their concurrence with it all categorized in that manner. I’m not just critiquing the readings of economists at the Fed and their conditional responses, I’m stating unequivocally that the entire affair, and all in it, has been reduced to pure farce. That starts squarely [...]

The Method of Compression Trades Is Not The Meaning

By |2015-11-18T15:33:33-05:00November 18th, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Dealer banks are accomplishing their withdrawal from FICC and the eurodollar necessities of dark leverage in the typical corporate fashion. For one, there is attrition as past derivatives trades simply runoff or mature. Second, banks have been engaging in what are called compression trades to an enormous degree, the money dealing equivalent of synergy. Finally, dealers have been studious and [...]

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