eurodollar

We Need To Define The ‘Shadows’, And All Parts of Them; or, ‘Rising Dollar’ Kills Another Recovery Narrative

By |2017-04-05T18:44:45-04:00April 5th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

JP Morgan’s CEO Jamie Dimon caused a stir yesterday with his 45-page annual letter to shareholders. The phrase that gained him so much widespread attention was, “there is something wrong with the US.” Dimon mentioned secular stagnation and correctly surmised it was the right idea if for the wrong reasons. He then gave his own which included a litany of [...]

Translating Bonds And ‘Dollars’

By |2017-04-05T16:51:16-04:00April 5th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

More than ten years after Alan Greenspan confessed to not understanding bonds and interest rates, the same assumptions that underpinned Greenspan’s “conundrum” remain as convention. If the Fed raises the federal funds rate by target or by corridor, then all rates should rise. It is believed to be just that simple, a fact (the belief) further established this week by [...]

‘Nowhere To Go But Up’ Survives Because The Fed Refuses To Be Honest About Its Assessment of the Output Gap

By |2017-04-04T19:05:42-04:00April 4th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Federal Reserve under Ben Bernanke committed several unforgivable mistakes during his tumultuous tenure, but cumulatively they could be easily summarized as “they really don’t know what they are doing.” Time and again whoever followed monetary policy and the conventions built upon it were led either off a cliff or somewhere just less dramatic. Federal Reserve actions are at best [...]

A Most Unaware Hurrah

By |2017-04-04T16:32:33-04:00April 4th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

We had become either sensitive or desensitized, depending on your definitions, to quarter ends full of turmoil and intrigue. In the monetary world, especially last year, each of the four seemed more interesting than the one preceding it – which was saying something given the state of the world during that time. Most of all, however, it was especially striking [...]

February US Trade Disappoints

By |2017-04-04T11:56:33-04:00April 4th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The oversized base effects of oil prices could not in February 2017 push up overall US imports. The United States purchased, according to the Census Bureau, 71% more crude oil from global markets this February than in February 2016. In raw dollar terms, it was an increase of $7.3 billion year-over-year. Total imports, however, only gained $8.4 billion, meaning that [...]

The Power of Oil

By |2017-03-31T11:34:07-04:00March 31st, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For the first time in 57 months, a span of nearly five years, the Fed’s preferred metric for US consumer price inflation reached the central bank’s explicit 2% target level. The PCE Deflator index was 2.12% higher in February 2017 than February 2016. Though rhetoric surrounding this result is often heated, the actual indicated inflation is decidedly not despite breaking [...]

The Basis For The Changing Basis

By |2017-03-28T12:13:18-04:00March 28th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It is simply the nature of modern Economics to get most things backward. Positive Economics particularly in the form of econometrics has been like a declaration of ignorance, where Economists have formally decided to try and understand as little as possible. If you know anything about statistics you know why, for the one thing that bogs down statistical equations and [...]

Durable Goods After Leap Year

By |2017-03-24T12:57:13-04:00March 24th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

New orders for durable goods (not including transportation orders) were up 1% year-over-year in February. That is less than the (revised) 4.4% growth in January, but as with all comparisons of February 2017 to February 2016 there will be some uncertainty surrounding the comparison to the leap year version. That would suggest that orders as well as shipments were somewhat [...]

Stuck In Yesterday

By |2017-03-23T18:13:35-04:00March 23rd, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It is understandable why everyone is right now fixated on Washington. The repeal, or not, of Obamacare is, to paraphrase former Vice President Biden, a big deal. In terms of market expectations, it is difficult to discern by how much. That was to be, after all, but one step of several reductions to the administrative burden on the economy. Maybe [...]

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