Europe

European Data: Much More In Store For Number Four

By |2020-02-14T18:29:01-05:00February 14th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It’s just Germany. It’s just industry. The excuses pile up as long as the downturn. Over across the Atlantic the situation has only now become truly serious. The European part of this globally synchronized downturn is already two years long and just recently is it becoming too much for the catcalls to ignore. Central bankers are trying their best to, [...]

I For One Welcome Our New Robot Overlords

By |2020-02-12T17:24:57-05:00February 12th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Fears over machines aren’t anything new. The Terminator franchise got started in the eighties and was hardly original back then. In gross economic terms, it may seem like the robot invasion is a 21st century phenomenon. It isn’t. One need only go back to Alberta of all places and learn about the Canadian Clifford Hugh Douglas. Douglas preached something called [...]

As the Data Comes In, 2019 Really Did End Badly

By |2020-02-11T19:33:47-05:00February 11th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The coronavirus began during December, but in its early stages no one knew a thing about it. It wasn’t until January 1 that health authorities in China closed the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market after initially determining some wild animals sold there might have been the source of a pneumonia-like outbreak. On January 5, the Wuhan Municipal Health Commission issued a [...]

COT Black: German Factories, Oklahoma Tank Farms, And FRBNY

By |2020-02-06T19:11:14-05:00February 6th, 2020|Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I wrote a few months ago that Germany’s factories have been the perfect example of the eurodollar squeeze. The disinflationary tendency that even central bankers can’t ignore once it shows up in the global economy as obvious headwinds. What made and still makes German industry noteworthy is the way it has unfolded and continues to unfold. The downtrend just won’t [...]

US Trade In December Was Too Much Oil

By |2020-02-05T15:48:30-05:00February 5th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

After a stunningly bad October and November, the Census Bureau reports US imports rebounded in December 2019 on a seasonally-adjusted basis. Having fallen below $200 billion for the first time since October 2017, total imports of goods rose to $205.8 billion in the final month of last year. However, most of that increase, two-thirds of it, was due to “industrial [...]

Don’t Forget Europe

By |2020-02-03T19:14:54-05:00February 3rd, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

According to Eurostat last week, Europe’s win streak reached 27 quarters in Q4 2019. If you count winning solely by the sign in front of quarterly GDP changes, then Mario Draghi handed off to Christine Lagarde an expansion just one quarter shy of seven years. It’s supposed to be impressive. Lagarde, however, begins her tenure in very much the same [...]

Euro$ #4 Turns Three

By |2020-01-24T18:34:47-05:00January 24th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

IHS Markit’s Composite US PMI rose to a 10-month high in January 2020. According to its flash estimate, the index was up to 53.1 from 52.7 in the final reading for December 2019. Driven by a rebound in the services component, the composite combines both the manufacturing and service PMI’s into a single number, Markit’s view is that the US [...]

FX, Repo, And Another ‘Strong’ Labor Market

By |2020-01-23T19:12:22-05:00January 23rd, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Between the summer of 2011 and February 2012, the unemployment rate experienced its largest half-year drop since the huge recovery that had been taking place in 1984. It was a very welcome sign that the US economy may have avoided becoming entangled in the global funding messes of 2011. Caught flat-footed, as always, Ben Bernanke’s Fed had ended QE2 at [...]

Germany, Maybe Europe: No Signs Of The Bottom

By |2020-01-16T18:53:16-05:00January 16th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For anyone thinking the global economy is turning around, it’s not the kind of thing you want to hear. Germany has been Ground Zero for this globally synchronized downturn. That’s where it began, meaning first showed up, all the way back at the start of 2018. Ever since, the German economy has been pulling Europe down into the economic abyss [...]

Global Headwinds and Disinflationary Pressures

By |2020-01-09T19:37:31-05:00January 9th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I’m going to go back to Mexico for the third day in a row. First it was imports (meaning Mexico’s exports) then automobile manufacturing and now Industrial Production. I’ll probably come back to this tomorrow when INEGI updates that last number for November 2019. For now, through October will do just fine, especially in light of where automobile production is [...]

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