india

One Fragile Year In Review: It Was A Warning

By |2018-09-05T17:46:54-04:00September 5th, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

One year ago today, something broke. It wasn't a big thing, practically a footnote seemingly not worth mainstream attention. Out of nowhere, the 4-week T-bill yield spiked. On Friday, September 1, 2017, the equivalent interest rate for the instrument was steady at 96 bps. That was already a problem because the Federal Reserve’s RRP was at the time set for [...]

Half A Decade Later, Here We Are Confused Again

By |2018-09-04T18:16:36-04:00September 4th, 2018|Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

These things are processes. They take time, a lot of time. Given that, I keep coming back to what might otherwise seem an absurd idea. The best-case scenario for all of us just might be a global crash, one that would make 2008 blush. At least then it might afford the world the benefit of unambiguousness. We almost got there [...]

Downside Not Upside Global Risk

By |2018-08-28T18:59:35-04:00August 28th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The UST yield curve continues to flatten (as it does elsewhere). All sorts of mainstream articles have been published lately about it. Many of them often refer to academic pieces ostensibly trying assuage all fears about the yield curve’s threatening inversion. Fret not the distortion, they say. And they are right. As I constantly remind people, it’s not inversion that [...]

Unwelcome August

By |2018-08-13T16:58:51-04:00August 13th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy|

There is just something about August. It is irresistible, apparently, in all the wrong ways. For starters, there are big ones and small ones but somehow they all line up against liquidity and plentiful eurodollar money. In the former class there was, of course, August 9, 2007, August 9, 2011, and August 10, 2015. Even in the latter category there [...]

CNY Less Down = What?

By |2018-07-31T18:59:36-04:00July 31st, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Argentina has had a good month of July. When last we checked toward the end of June, the peso was still plummeting. It would nearly close below 29, an absolutely astounding drop that made plain this wasn’t devaluation as “stimulus.” That plus the whole record IMF bailout and the immediate dollar funding that came with it. That was June 7, [...]

Chart of the Week: Pure Risk

By |2018-06-15T19:01:45-04:00June 15th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Well before Jerome Powell changed his dots a little, or the ECB chickened out, the Reserve Bank of India had already acted. For the first time since January 2014, on June 6 the RBI raised its benchmark repo rate. Rather than reverse the rupee’s slide it appears to have renewed it. The euro may have routed yesterday and hogged all the [...]

Simple Very Complex Correlation

By |2018-06-08T12:13:53-04:00June 8th, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It’s amazing how in a world of supposedly separate, closed economies they all seem to congregate anyway toward the same events. In early 2000, the US dot-com bubble ran into its own contradictions, the rationalizations holding it together no longer so tempting to what was for years insatiable investor appetite. Not even a year later, a mild recession began. What [...]

This Is A Really Strange Development (UPDATED)

By |2018-05-25T12:40:18-04:00May 25th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Last week, I reported on a sharp drop in repo fails for the week of May 9. The decline was so much that FRBNY indicated there were essentially no fails during those five trading sessions. It was way out of line with recent history and opened up little more than wild speculation as to what might have caused it. One [...]

This Is A Really Strange Development

By |2018-05-17T17:41:55-04:00May 17th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Observing the eurodollar system as I’ve done for so many years, you have to be prepared for curve balls thrown at you. Just when you think you’ve got it clocked (sometimes literally), something changes and it all gets tossed out the window. About a month ago, the Federal Reserve reported a sharp drop of UST’s in custody on behalf of [...]

An India Canary?

By |2018-05-15T19:40:39-04:00May 15th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The sweeping tide of populist election victories has not been limited to just the US and Europe. There have been torrents in Asia, too. Though there is some disagreement whether he counts among them or not, India’s Narendra Modi swept to a historic electoral triumph in May 2014 sure sounding a lot like one, maybe even one of the first.  [...]

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