exports

US/Global Trade Too Suggests Supercycle or Permanent Shrinkage

By |2015-08-05T11:38:09-04:00August 5th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There was absolutely nothing good about the most recent trade data for June. Even what looked like an improvement really wasn’t, suggesting, strongly, that conditions in the global economy are still declining. With Canada falling to recession, blaming a “puzzling” and sharp decline in non-petroleum exports (the US as that nation’s biggest customer), the decline in US import “demand” completing [...]

Still Peering At Our Unstable Future

By |2015-07-27T16:00:29-04:00July 27th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The old cliché is that everything of significance in life is a marathon rather than a sprint. In Japan, such sentiment strains all reason as there is no way that any marathon, economic or otherwise, could possibly be expected to last more twenty-five years. But here it is in 2015, thirty years after the Plaza Accord and BoJ’s first massive [...]

China Completes Another Head-Fake

By |2015-07-24T15:31:28-04:00July 24th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The concept of a head-fake in stock investing is pretty well-established and well-known but it may have to be extended to economics. Every small increase in positive numbers for major statistics is extrapolated into grandiose projections for the final recovery that “everyone” knows has to be coming. Yet, each and every time those expectations are delivered, and swallowed without question [...]

Wholesale Sales Drop Now 7% Too

By |2015-07-10T12:07:14-04:00July 10th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

May must have been the month of sevens. First, exports declined by 7% year-over-year, as did imports. Now the Commerce Department reports wholesale sales within the US fell by 6.8%, which is good enough in close rounding to be yet another seven percent contraction. In the case of wholesale sales, while those estimates are likely coincidence at all around -7%, [...]

Despite All Theoretical Assurances, Still Toward Contraction

By |2015-07-07T14:36:50-04:00July 7th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If one were to measure the US economy by what it is, right now, there would be so little growth or activity as to question the actual cycle. In fact, about the only factor that seems to be out of recession is the expectation for the second half of the year (which is already trimmed from the “slump” sticking to [...]

China At Odds With QE

By |2015-06-10T16:58:55-04:00June 10th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With every piece of “unexpected” weak data from China, the calls for more “stimulus” grow louder and more desperate. And still the PBOC sits on the sidelines with only minor adjustments. The latest of those has been what amounts to a muni swap, with banks eligible to pledge municipal government debt as collateral in repurchase operations, SLF’s, MLF’s and even [...]

The Global Downside To Eurodollar Decay

By |2015-06-08T11:52:59-04:00June 8th, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It is exceedingly difficult these days to detect where finance ends and the economy begins. That was intended, of course, as it was believed that greater intrusiveness on the part of the financial ends were consistent with greater, and better, economic control. Certain strains of economics have been obsessed since the dawn of the discipline with finding “optimal” outcomes. More [...]

Recessionary ‘Feel’ Remains In Trade

By |2015-06-03T17:27:05-04:00June 3rd, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I understand the idea behind trying to get exports to fit into the orthodox conventions about the dollar and global trade, even if I don’t agree with that at all, as it at least makes some plausible sense. If the dollar is up against trade partners, in simple math terms you might expect to see fewer US exports heading overseas [...]

Chinese Stubborness

By |2015-05-11T15:13:30-04:00May 11th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I think at this point with China, everything from here on out until whatever final resolution to the bubble era will be “unexpected.” That qualification has been overused almost everywhere during this global “recovery” that never was, the latest being China’s exports sinking in April as well as March. Analysts and economists were thinking about a tepid plus sign, expectations [...]

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