Inventory

All Eyes On Inventory

By |2021-09-23T19:33:50-04:00September 23rd, 2021|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

You’ve heard of the virtuous circle in the economy. Risk taking leads to spending/investment/hiring, which then leads to more spending/investment/hiring. Recovery, in other words. In the old days of the 20th century, quite a lot of the circle was rounded out by the inventory cycle. Both recession and recovery would depend upon how much additional product floated up and down [...]

First Transitory In Producers, Then More For Consumers, Now A Negative For Import Prices

By |2021-09-15T19:54:58-04:00September 15th, 2021|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The American people were first introduced to the Treasury helicopter in 2008, not 2021. The Bush Administration's “radical” approach to keeping the Great “Recession” from becoming a contraction, obviously, failed spectacularly even though the initial returns had been positive – literally positive in how Q2 ’08 GDP suddenly turned higher as if this was by skilled design. Economists, including those [...]

Taking Inventory of Real Economy Inflation Potential

By |2021-08-17T17:11:40-04:00August 17th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

A tale of two retail industries. In the one, the well-known chip problem holding back what is already a monstrously robust (if artificial) sales environment. Automobile dealer lots are nearing empty and carmakers are unable (perhaps unwilling, too?) to produce near sufficient volumes to keep up let alone restock.This view of the situation, though, has clouded perspectives particularly as they [...]

A Real Example Of Price Imbalance

By |2021-08-10T19:52:59-04:00August 10th, 2021|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It’s not just the trade data from individual countries. Take the WTO’s estimates which are derived from exports and imports going into or out of nearly all of them. These figures show that for all that recovery glory being printed up out of Uncle Sam’s checkbook, the American West Coast might be the only place where we can find anything [...]

Yep, There’s A New ‘V’ In Town And The Locals…Don’t Seem To Much Care For It

By |2020-10-21T16:54:10-04:00October 21st, 2020|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

They should be drooling over the prospects of a clearing path toward normality. The pain and disaster of 2020’s economic hole receding into a more pleasant 2021 which would have been in position to conceivably pay it all back before any long run damage. Getting back to just even with February instead is becoming a distant probability, the kind of [...]

OK, That’s More Like It, But Does Enough Of The Economy Believe It’s Enough?

By |2020-10-16T17:02:58-04:00October 16th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

OK, that’s more like it. Finally. American consumers absolutely splurged last month. According the Census Bureau, retail sales last month spiked by nearly 2% (seasonally-adjusted) from August, an unusually big monthly increase. This surge in spending during September 2020 sent the unadjusted total up by just more than 7% from September 2019. How good is that? Setting aside the statistics [...]

That’s Probably Why Only Half a “V”

By |2020-07-29T19:19:39-04:00July 29th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Why only half a “V?” If the latest PMI’s are anywhere close to accurate, and they don’t have to be all that close, then the production side of the economy may have stalled out somewhere nearer the trough of this contraction. The promise of May’s big payroll report surprise has dissipated in more than just the bond market. This isn’t [...]

The Smallness of the Most Gigantic

By |2020-06-16T18:39:50-04:00June 16th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

These numbers do seem epic, don’t they? It’s hard to ignore when you have the greatest percentage increase in the history of a major economic account. Just writing that sentence it’s difficult to deny the power of those words. Which is precisely the point: we already know ahead of time how the biggest economic holes in history are going to [...]

Three Straight Quarters of 2%, And Yet Each One Very Different

By |2020-01-30T17:25:44-05:00January 30th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Headline GDP growth during the fourth quarter of 2019 was 2.05849% (continuously compounded annual rate), slightly lower than the (revised) 2.08169% during Q3. For the year, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) puts total real output at $19.07 trillion, or annual growth of 2.33% and down from 2.93% in 2018. Last year was weaker than 2017, the second lowest out [...]

The Inventory Context For Rate Cuts and Their Real Nature/Purpose

By |2019-10-31T20:38:47-04:00October 30th, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

What typically distinguishes recessions from downturns is the inventory cycle. Even in 2008, that was the basis for the Great “Recession.” It was distinguished most prominently by the financial conditions and global-reaching panic, true, but the effects of the monetary crash registered heaviest in the various parts of that inventory process. An economy for whatever reasons slows down. That leads [...]

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