eurodollar

Part 2 of June TIC: The Dollar Why

By |2020-08-18T20:07:58-04:00August 18th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

Before getting into the why of the dollar’s stubbornly high exchange value in the face of so much “money printing”, we need to first go back and undertake a decent enough review of the guts maybe even the central focus of the global (euro)dollar system. I’ve written before that the repo market is the lender of last resort, not central [...]

Part 1 of June TIC: The Dollar What

By |2020-08-18T18:35:06-04:00August 18th, 2020|Markets|

While the world is taking the smallest of baby steps in the right direction, mostly it’s been related to the part of the eurodollar system that everyone can see. Not bank reserves and the Fed’s “money printing”, though you can see them and we’re told to obsess about them those things don’t matter. I mean instead the dollar’s exchange value; [...]

Inflation Hysteria 2, China Style

By |2020-08-14T20:03:49-04:00August 14th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Forget scripted television. If you want Game of Thrones-style palace intrigue, you can do no better than Beijing in 2020. There are all sorts of rumors floating around, few of which can ever get confirmed. It’s not that there are rumors but rather how many of them, and how they don’t seem to be stamped out with the usual regularity [...]

What’s In The Same Number? China’s Part In The (euro)Dollar Story

By |2020-08-04T19:26:42-04:00August 4th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There’s one part of the dollar story I’ve not yet touched on recently. We’ve already heard, too much, about how the Fed’s killing the dollar, or at least is aiming to with all its immense money printing fire power. While it’s the euro which has demanded so much from DXY that it almost seems plausible (to a few) this time, [...]

Exposing The Golden Lie

By |2020-07-21T17:01:59-04:00July 21st, 2020|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

To hear it told nowadays, you’d think that gold’s amazing run began when Jay Powell started cranking out bank reserves. Those telling the story equate those bank reserves to effective money printing, so it conforms to the conventional myth about gold’s relationship to the money supply (whatever that is). Throw in a federal government, every federal government, recklessly borrowing and [...]

How Do You Say (Way) Off-balance Sheet In Chinese?

By |2020-06-24T19:38:33-04:00June 24th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Where central banks are concerned, it’s not conspiracy theory so much as the term “off-balance sheet.” There’s a reason Enron kicked off that mass-migration into the footnotes. For monetary officials, there’s the choice to be like Montagu Norman and what he thought of good practice at central banks. Silence.For years, the Chinese have tried it the other way. Big Mama [...]

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 [...]

Synchronized, Like A Cheap Imported Suit

By |2020-05-05T16:16:03-04:00May 5th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Trading partners like Mexico didn’t have a labor participation problem by which to hide the economic downturn last year. The whole idea of “decoupling” in the 2018 sense of the word was how the US economy, by virtue of its 50-year low unemployment rate, couldn’t possibly be as weak as it increasingly appeared overseas. The US was good, they kept [...]

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