fiscal stimulus

Nothing Has Changed In China

By |2016-12-13T16:56:29-05:00December 13th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Chinese industrial production, retail sales, and fixed asset investment were all taken as better or improving. Industrial production, for example, was 6.2% in November 2016, up from 6.1% in both September and October. Retail sales grew 10.8%, the best rate since December 2015. Fixed asset investment grew by an accumulated rate of 8.3% for the second straight month, better by [...]

The (Ongoing) Myth Of Stable China

By |2016-10-19T12:28:13-04:00October 19th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There are those who believe that the Chinese economy has stabilized, as if that was a good thing. Many of these people, mostly economists, said and declared much the same after 2012. That China’s economy might be in 2016 merely as bad as it was in 2015 is a highly negative development, one which requires standards for economic judgment to [...]

Maybe Economists Should Just Throw Darts Rather Than Keep Searching For The Magic Number

By |2016-08-18T17:27:58-04:00August 18th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

One of the primary points of emphasis with regard to Japan’s QQE was the yen itself. Pushing the value down, even by misconceptions about what central banks do, was supposed to simultaneously increase inflation pressures via the currency translation while also stimulating the export sector to a sufficient degree that Japan Inc. would be reborn and share the nominal gains [...]

Bigger Than All The World’s QE’s Combined

By |2016-05-23T16:58:22-04:00May 23rd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

So thoroughly destroyed is Japan’s economy that some of the numbers it produces are beyond comprehension, just staggering in any meaningful context. For example, Japan’s real GDP (SAAR) for Q1 2016 was ¥530 trillion (chained 2005). That compared to ¥447 trillion in Q1 1994. Over two decades and two additional years the Japanese economy has grown by a grand total [...]

The Weakness Is Really Different Now

By |2016-05-02T19:15:16-04:00May 2nd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If there is any wonder why PMI’s deserve scorn, this morning’s twin bill delivered solid reasoning. Both the ISM Manufacturing Index and the Markit Manufacturing PMI declined, and both remained above 50. However, there was no real consensus about what any of it meant. Depending on the media outlet determining commentary about either, there was both positive and negative spin [...]

The Slowdown Downgrades The ‘New Normal’ But Not (Yet) All ‘Stimulus’

By |2016-04-05T17:53:29-04:00April 5th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The only common factor on the economy viewed from the mainstream in the past few years is the shrinking standards by which it is judged. Janet Yellen can somehow suggest erratic 2% GDP growth is “overheating” or close to it only because that is the reduction of the “new normal.” Because that has been so declared by the very same [...]

The Problem Is Accumulating Accumulation

By |2015-06-22T16:26:26-04:00June 22nd, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The home market may literally be testing the notion that interest rate manipulation has the net effect of pulling forward demand. Existing home sales, as tabulated by the National Association of Realtors, surged in May to a new six-year high. That sounds like terrific news about a rebound in the real estate market after quite a rough period dating back [...]

Inflation, Properly Defined

By |2015-06-01T12:13:41-04:00June 1st, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With the preliminary release of the quarterly GDP revision comes the BEA’s version of corporate profits. This is obviously different from EPS accounting that goes along with stock indices and various earnings growth measures as this macro view of profits encompasses a much larger business spectrum (though it does not include non-corporate business which is a pass-through component into personal [...]

‘Best Way’ To Create Systemic Poverty

By |2014-05-13T16:34:00-04:00May 13th, 2014|Bonds, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

The primary argument in favor of “aggregate demand” policies, or at least attempts at demand-side “stimulus”, amounts to putting more money into the economy as spending. You hear it all the time, as in give money to people that do not have it now and they will spend it, thus creating a “pump priming” that stirs the economic engine as [...]

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