eurodollar

A Year Later, The Fact Fedwire Is Still There Tells Us Why Markets Have Done What They’ve Done

By |2022-02-23T18:55:59-05:00February 23rd, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The world seemed to have everything going for it, for once, everything coming up favorable for the first time seemingly in forever. There were vaccines, financial government interventions worldwide just recklessly chucking money at anyone with a pulse, an end to the pandemic even normalcy right in front of us. What could possibly have messed this up?It was around 11:15 [...]

The Real Money Doesn’t *Spread* Inflation

By |2022-02-21T18:38:16-05:00February 21st, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It was the clash of all clashes, the textbook up against practice in a real world falling apart. Theory’s chance to save the day and prove itself, what should’ve been the legend’s finest hour. Time to put up, or... On the one side, there was the “money” we’re all told is easily created, and on the other what may have [...]

The Global Money Spec-TIC-le In December

By |2022-02-15T18:07:05-05:00February 15th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Treasury Department released its broad TIC data today for the month of December 2022. Omicron fears, bond yields dropping despite the Fed’s rate hikes and an accelerating US CPI. Sure enough, more than a few segments of TIC consistent with those general outlines.Let’s begin with one of those which doesn’t have an immediate explanation; or, put another way, can’t [...]

China’s Total Dollar Equation: CNY minus Trade Flows equals Some Sense of the Euro$ Problem?

By |2022-02-09T19:13:51-05:00February 9th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In the earliest days of the eurodollar, its purpose was primarily as a global reserve medium to intermediate and finance trade. To surmount Triffin’s Paradox, this ledger system arose as demand for the reserve currency outstripped the Bretton Woods arrangement’s ability to supply it (because it was constrained by US gold reserves). Rebuilding first from WWII and then an explosion [...]

Why Russia And What Happened To ‘BRICScoin’

By |2022-01-31T20:04:06-05:00January 31st, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Rate of change in economy goes down, rate of change in politics goes way up. The latter half of the formula, politics, historically applies to the internal makeup and stability of whatever country or system experiencing the macro drought as well as to its neighbors. Going back through time, any prolonged period when the economy was in distress (which typically [...]

China Has No Room Or Any Real Reason To Rescue 2022

By |2022-01-25T19:02:46-05:00January 25th, 2022|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When growth stops being growth, or the same growth, what do you do? The Keynesian textbooks all say “stimulus”, but what happens if the stimulus doesn’t stimulate? Worse, when it doesn’t stimulate because it can’t due to other pre-existing and intractable impediments.This is Xi Jinping’s dilemma and it only begins with the textbook’s missing chapters on eurodollar money.So, let’s start [...]

You Don’t Have To Take My Word For It

By |2022-01-24T20:28:40-05:00January 24th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Stop me if you’ve heard this before. Longtime readers/followers/enthusiasts will be forgiven for immediately thinking I’m quoting myself again, as I so often do: Following its emergence, the eurodollar market played a big role in the Bretton Woods system and also its breakdown and eventual demise in the early 1970s. The primary reason I refer so much to my own [...]

Sentiment v. Substance: Checking In On Collateral Via, Yes, The Fed

By |2022-01-11T20:39:44-05:00January 11th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Federal Reserve, like other central banks around the world, it does lend out the securities it owns and holds. Sophisticated modern wholesale money markets are highly collateralized, so much so that collateral itself takes on the properties of currency. Elasticity of collateral is as much – if not more – important as elasticity of other forms of wholesale money [...]

China’s Petroyuan, Uncle Sam’s Checkbook, The Fed’s Bank Reserves: Who Really Sits On King Dollar’s Throne? (trick question)

By |2022-01-11T17:12:24-05:00January 11th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

A full part of the inflation hysteria, the first one, was the dollar’s looming crash. The currency was, too many claimed, on the verge of collapse by late 2017, heading downward and besieged on multiple fronts by economics and politics alike. Basically, the Fed had “printed” too much “money” and the Chinese playing some “long game” were purportedly ready at [...]

Taper Rejection: Mao Back On China’s Front Page

By |2021-12-28T19:59:21-05:00December 28th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Chinese run media, the Global Times, blatantly tweeted an homage to China's late leader Mao Zedong commemorating his 128th birthday. Fully understanding the storm of controversy this would create, with the Communist government’s full approval, such a provocation has been taken in the West as if just one more chess piece played in its geopolitical game against the United States [...]

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