industrial production

Another Round of Transitory: US Retail Sales & (revised) IP

By |2021-06-15T19:47:01-04:00June 15th, 2021|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Same stuff, different month. We can basically reprint both what was described yesterday about supply curves not keeping up with exaggerated demand as well as the past two months of commentary on Retail Sales plus Industrial Production each for the US. Quite on the nose, US demand for goods, anyway, is eroding if still artificially very high. Producers, on the [...]

Lumbering Economy And The Curves Behind Transitory Inflation

By |2021-06-14T19:01:18-04:00June 14th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

While capital “E” economics can never seem to get out of its own, infatuated with statistics and regressions instead, small “e” economics is proven time and again. Simple supply and demand curves aren’t a realistic simulation of potential conditions, yet they are far more helpful than DSGE models even if highly stylized representations. Take, for example, lumber prices. Anyone remotely [...]

China Repeats Its Same Case For No-Inflation Bond Yields

By |2021-05-17T18:14:36-04:00May 17th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It makes all the difference in the world. Back in the back half of 2018, the word more often being used when compared to that year’s first half had been “slowing.” By the later months, it was pretty obvious this was taking place no matter how many times the American unemployment rate was dusted off and trotted out in front [...]

Weekly Market Pulse: Bonds Didn’t Get The Inflation Memo

By |2021-05-17T08:30:54-04:00May 16th, 2021|Alhambra Research, Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Markets, Real Estate, Stocks|

It was all over the news last week. Inflation has arrived. The CPI was hotter than expected. The PPI was even hotter. Import prices were up and export prices were up more. It was impossible to miss the inflation story last week. Stocks got the message and sold off on the hot CPI and finished the week lower for a [...]

More Than A Benchmark Peeve

By |2021-05-14T19:40:27-04:00May 14th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Why do economic data providers continue to overstate reflationary periods? This is more substantial than a pet peeve, though to many if not most it might seem like splitting hairs. We’ve seen this happen repeatedly with each eurodollar cycle. The more egregious economic overstatements were definitely 2014’s, the data errors contributing at least something to the confusion and narrative mistake, [...]

Fifteen Greater Than Fifty: Red Hot This Is Not

By |2021-05-14T17:43:07-04:00May 14th, 2021|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

American consumers binged again in April, though not much more than they had in March. Previously delivered government stipends continue to inflate retail activity if not much else. According to the Census Bureau, retail sales rose “just” 0.7% last month when compared to the month before it. Given that March had been up (revised) nearly 11% versus February, any even [...]

Which Is The Global Outlier?

By |2021-05-07T19:28:06-04:00May 7th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Awash in “stimulus”, but none able to dent a semiconductor shortage which is purportedly the reason for production woes. In the US and many other places around the world, governments have gone nuclear, with America’s federal authorities dropping checks with abandon. This has created, according to some, everyone in the media, a red hot economy right on the verge of [...]

Bonds v. Economists 5

By |2021-04-16T18:48:55-04:00April 16th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Given the historic data for US retail sales, “somehow” the bond market ignored them yesterday (and today). Yields globally fell for the most part, with real yields (TIPS) really discounting the significance of consumers in March. Bonds aren’t buying that this is anything other than temporary.Not surprisingly, the mainstream media refuses not to buy what bonds aren’t. I mean, for [...]

Perhaps Just One Word Absent From The Historic Consumer Splurge

By |2021-04-15T20:00:07-04:00April 15th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Enormous. Terrific. Unbelievable. Biggest ever. The superlatives for US consumer spending during the month of March 2021 are appropriate, and for once they aren’t caused by some artifact of arithmetic or some other trick. While there are absolutely some base effects within the numbers, these levels of retail sales are far and away more than those. It's so ridiculous that [...]

Being Unsentimental About Economic Meteorology

By |2021-03-22T18:16:19-04:00March 22nd, 2021|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It was very cold across much of the United States in February in parts of it that usually don’t freeze up – literally and figuratively. While electricity in Texas garnered most of the attention, the weather was just as bad in many other states across the typically mild wintering South. Undoubtedly, last month was an exception to the seasons’ status [...]

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