exports

Second Wave Global Trade

By |2020-07-07T17:33:30-04:00July 7th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Unlike some sentiment indicators, the ISM Non-manufacturing, in particular, actual trade in goods continued to contract in May 2020. Both exports and imports fell further, though the rate of descent has improved. In fact, that’s all the other, more subdued PMI’s like Markit’s have been suggesting. Getting closer to a bottom.Unlike any of the sentiment numbers, however, these trade figures [...]

Someone’s Giving Us The (Trade) Business

By |2020-06-08T19:07:53-04:00June 8th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The NBER has made its formal declaration. Surprising no one, as usual this group of mainstream academic Economists wishes to tell us what we already know. At least this time their determination of recession is noticeably closer to the beginning of the actual event. The Great “Recession”, you might recall, wasn’t even classified as an “official” contraction until December 2008 [...]

Same Trade, Different World

By |2020-05-07T19:34:44-04:00May 7th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It was another one of those good news, bad news data days in China. Unfortunately, the good news just doesn’t make much sense. That was Chinese exports which, according to the country’s General Administration of Customs, increased by 4.5% year-over-year in April 2020. Given the state of the world last month, exports were expected to drop by 12 to 14% [...]

Synchronized, Like A Cheap Imported Suit

By |2020-05-05T16:16:03-04:00May 5th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Trading partners like Mexico didn’t have a labor participation problem by which to hide the economic downturn last year. The whole idea of “decoupling” in the 2018 sense of the word was how the US economy, by virtue of its 50-year low unemployment rate, couldn’t possibly be as weak as it increasingly appeared overseas. The US was good, they kept [...]

Failing Math

By |2020-04-06T16:27:30-04:00April 6th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When it’s all over with, I think we’re going to find out we’ve all been unnecessarily harmed by two stochastic models. And in the greatest tragic irony of them all, it was entirely predictable. These statistical constructions can’t predict a thing, subject as they all are to GIGO limitations (Garbage In, Garbage Out). It’s the math which gives them the [...]

Sick Camels, Thin Straws, And The Global Virus (both of them)

By |2020-03-06T15:57:13-05:00March 6th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Unlike the headline Establishment Survey, the rest of the economic data isn’t surging like it’s 2014 all over again. On the same day the BLS issues the next blowout payroll report, the Census Bureau suggests instead US demand, at least for goods produced overseas, continues to decline at a precipitous pace. Seasonally-adjusted, there had been something of a rebound in [...]

Japanese Data: Much More In Store For Number Four

By |2020-02-18T17:01:24-05:00February 18th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

They put it off so long they backed themselves into this corner. The Japanese government under Prime Minister Shinzo Abe had originally scheduled two VAT tax hikes as part of the rollout for Abenomics. It would be inflationary and fiscally responsible all in one pass. To make sure Japan’s perpetually struggling economy could absorb any fallout from them while still [...]

Two Years And Now It’s Getting Serious

By |2020-02-07T19:04:36-05:00February 7th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

We knew German Industrial Production for December 2019 was going to be ugly given what deStatis had reported for factory orders yesterday. In all likelihood, Germany’s industrial economy ended last year sinking and maybe too quickly. What was actually reported, however, exceeded every pessimistic guess and expectation – by a lot. IP absolutely plummeted in the final month of 2019. [...]

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 [...]

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