interest rate fallacy

Explaining All The Facts

By |2019-02-25T19:17:16-05:00February 25th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

St. Louis Fed President James Bullard was in New York last week, making a presentation to the US Monetary Policy Forum. A well-known dove, speaking to CNBC while attending the conference, as a current voting member of the FOMC Bullard announced his dissenting view to the last “rate hike.” He was not eligible to vote in December, rotating into this [...]

Yields Falling, Who Could Be Buying Without QE’s?

By |2018-12-28T17:42:56-05:00December 28th, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In the US Treasury market, the situation has been a little different. The BOND ROUT!!! theory posits that without the Fed to buy up additional supply, yields as a technical factor have to rise putting more upward pressure on rates than already exists from a booming economy. Add to that foreign selling in 2018, it left many expecting an epic [...]

Selling UST’s + Hedging Costs ≠ BOND ROUT!!!!

By |2018-11-26T16:54:05-05:00November 26th, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Maybe blame the ECB. On June 5, 2014, Europe’s central bank announced a change in monetary policy. Beginning June 11, their deposit account mechanism that acts as a hard floor for European money rates would be set below zero for the first time. It would mean any funds left on deposit with the ECB in this account would be “paid” [...]

Bond Bull Bull

By |2018-10-30T22:45:02-04:00October 30th, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

On February 12, 1999, the Bank of Japan announced that it was going full zero. Japan’s central bank would from that day forward push the overnight uncollateralized lending (interbank) rate to the zero lower bound. Further, it pledged to keep it there until Japan’s economy recovered. The economic slump in the nineties had been by 1999 almost a decade in [...]

Seriously, Wherefore Art Thou Collateral?

By |2017-12-07T17:35:32-05:00December 7th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I’m going to go out on a limb and claim there is something seriously wrong in repo. All jokes aside, I know it sounds like a broken record but the dimension that matters is not intermittent collateral problems so much as the greater intensity to them and in a condensing timeframe. Escalation is a description you really don’t want to [...]

Ahead, Not Behind

By |2017-11-03T17:04:29-04:00November 3rd, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Back in September, the FOMC announced that it was in October going to start normalizing its balance sheet. The policy statement issued that day included all the usual qualifications of “solid”, “strengthen”, and “picked up.” The near-term risks to the economy, it was written, “appear roughly balanced.” Not all was well with the economic situation, however, as the central bank’s [...]

Wherefore Art Thou Collateral?

By |2017-09-07T16:40:36-04:00September 7th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The US Treasury as a result of the government’s bloated response to the Great “Recession” has been forced in notes and bonds to reopen their auctions each and every month. Before then, reopenings were less frequent. They weren’t infrequent, but the Treasury wasn’t just auctioning 10s every month. In 2007, for example, the Department conducted four quarterly auctions and one [...]

A Decade of Fallacy

By |2017-07-18T14:19:24-04:00July 18th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Ten years ago yesterday, Bear Stearns sent a letter to shareholders of two specific hedge funds that it sponsored. Whenever anyone brings up the name now, you immediately know where this is going. That wasn’t the case in 2007, however. Whatever the world may think of Bear in hindsight, a decade ago it was a highly reputable firm. These two [...]

‘Nowhere To Go But Up’ Survives Because The Fed Refuses To Be Honest About Its Assessment of the Output Gap

By |2017-04-04T19:05:42-04:00April 4th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Federal Reserve under Ben Bernanke committed several unforgivable mistakes during his tumultuous tenure, but cumulatively they could be easily summarized as “they really don’t know what they are doing.” Time and again whoever followed monetary policy and the conventions built upon it were led either off a cliff or somewhere just less dramatic. Federal Reserve actions are at best [...]

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