eurodollar

The ‘Dollar’ Always Wins, And the Downside Isn’t Purely Financial or Even Economic

By |2016-11-08T12:14:32-05:00November 8th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For about the last two weeks, I have been writing about the contours of what I have perceived as a RMB liquidity operation that seems to be far more than the usual management of day-to-day confluences. Since the last week in October, RMB liquidity both onshore and offshore has been more and more plentiful but only in the shortest overnight [...]

One Or The Other Is Wrong, Which Means It’s All Wrong

By |2016-11-04T16:21:40-04:00November 4th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Throughout the 1990’s, calculated productivity in the US skyrocketed in what was taken then as a sign of monetary and economic genius, the “maestro” as it was. By the incomplete measures we have, that certainly seemed to be a plausible case. Starting in 1997, the BLS’s first measure for economic productivity, output per hour, surged. The consequence of that productivity [...]

Weak But Not Getting Weaker

By |2016-11-03T17:16:47-04:00November 3rd, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If we were to accurately describe the economy right now, it would be weak – but not getting weaker. I believe that is the product of the “dollar”, or lack of further “dollar” intrusion. Combined with the usual seasonal changes earlier in the year, the nervous calm of the past almost eight months has had a limited but nonetheless soothing [...]

Where Do We Begin? No More Targets

By |2016-11-02T18:11:42-04:00November 2nd, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In the seventeenth episode of the second season of the Comedy Central cartoon South Park, the show introduces one of its longest lasting memes that has survived despite the first airing being nearly twenty years ago, and all the vulgarity and seemingly gratuitous violence in between. Titled Gnomes, we find one of the main character’s underpants (seriously) being stolen by [...]

Global PMI’s Running Almost Perfect Cycles

By |2016-11-01T13:05:26-04:00November 1st, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

A strong cohort of global PMI’s has cheered today pretty much everyone, from economists to the media and anyone else in between. China’s official Manufacturing PMI was calculated at 51.2 in October, the highest level since July 2014, up seemingly significantly from the 49.9 just three months ago this July. In the United States, the ISM Manufacturing rose again to [...]

The Story of Durable Goods Is the Story Of The (Global) Economy

By |2016-10-27T18:57:33-04:00October 27th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Durable goods continue to show that there is no difference between the economy of 2015 and the one being described by these numbers in 2016. To the “transitory” narrative, it is the death blow, which is why so many central banks and central bankers are busy exploring other options (while as quietly as they can writing down the future economy). [...]

The Math Thickens

By |2016-10-26T16:34:03-04:00October 26th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It has been my contention for some long while that one of the biggest parts of this “rising dollar”, that is, again, nothing more than a euphemism for the various ways in which there is a “dollar” shortage, is balance sheet math. The problem in as simple terms as perhaps possible is that positions were taken, balance sheets constructed, and [...]

Admitting Wrong May Be Better But It Still Doesn’t Equate To Suddenly Being Effective

By |2016-10-25T16:57:42-04:00October 25th, 2016|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

In early July, the Bank of Japan may or may not have contemplated the mother of all “stimulus.” Rumors began to fly that the Japanese central bank was, in fact, seriously considering an actual monetary helicopter as a way to boost flagging confidence rightly suspicious of any more QQE (or NIRP). We won’t know for some time (when the meeting [...]

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