janet yellen

Still More Inventory

By |2015-11-24T17:03:32-05:00November 24th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The only piece of the GDP revision to note is that the BEA is still having great difficulty estimating inventory. That isn’t surprising since businesses in this area are behaving far different than any expectation, even factoring the difficulty of the “recovery” environment. That leaves instead only Janet Yellen’s continuous pleading about the surge in consumer spending that never seems [...]

If You Don’t Learn…

By |2015-11-23T13:38:55-05:00November 23rd, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Monetarism, at its core, is relatively quite simple. It would have to be, standing upon ground of nothing much more than generic concepts for almost every important economic factor. But all of it can be distilled into the idea of money supply; given “enough”, the economy will thrive. That view includes some of the worst of conditions so long as [...]

Rogue Independence

By |2015-11-20T17:08:31-05:00November 20th, 2015|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

By all meaningful measures, credit markets today aren’t any different than they were after the first “dollar” wave crested and subsided. Despite all that has transpired all over the place in 2015, this resiliency is worrisome. No matter how much commentary wishes it to be a comforting tool of monetary policy adjusting into economic salvation, the fact that these indications [...]

Consumers Borrow But Ports Grow Quiet, A Combination That Does Not Lead Anywhere Good

By |2015-11-19T13:44:13-05:00November 19th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Fed has many problems with its attempt to convince the world that it has itself fulfilled its recovery mission. That self-reflected “mandate” is meant to include a masterful revisit to prior American infatuation with debt and credit. There was no more visible and visceral demonstration of those terms than the middle 2000’s, and it is the intent of monetary [...]

Given Our Situation, Federal Funds Makes Perfect Sense

By |2015-11-18T17:21:30-05:00November 18th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The federal funds rate holds no relevance to anything actually useful and meaningful. That has been the case for some time, though pinning down exactly when federal funds became irrelevant is a bit of chore (I personally view it when altering Regulation M in 1990 created a regulatory par with eurodollars). Even the FOMC admits how actual finance has passed [...]

The Conspicuous Temperature Gradient of Finicky US Consumers

By |2015-11-11T10:30:23-05:00November 11th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Janet Yellen and orthodox economists claim that the economy can only be gaining, and that word is taken, on faith, as if some updated, modern gold standard for meaning. No matter the contrary in actual evidence and observation, the “word” remains as if diktat were the only employ. It has produced some very strange dichotomies, particularly of late, where those [...]

The Quick Burn of Balance Sheet Capacity Is the Recovery’s Mangled End

By |2015-11-06T17:13:40-05:00November 6th, 2015|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

While the stock market had one of its best months in years, it was, like the jobs report, uncorroborated by almost everything else. The junk bond bubble, in particular, stands in sharp and stark refutation of whatever stocks might be incorporating, especially if that might be based upon assumptions of Yellen’s re-found backbone. Do or do not, corporate junk remains [...]

What Can Yellen Really Do?

By |2015-11-06T11:10:41-05:00November 6th, 2015|Commodities, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For one, eurodollar futures are “obliged” to take account of any threats from the FOMC even though, in the end, they might only be self-fulfilling. Because the Fed has very little actual ability to condition money markets, none of that is truly “real” but there remains the unknown and money dealing agents still seem reticent about any kind of (further) [...]

How We Got Here: The Fed Confuses Itself Part 3

By |2015-11-02T17:52:06-05:00November 2nd, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I was rather content to let the matter lie after devoting a couple of lengthy expositions to it, but the Fed has its own way of confirming every charge. I am writing again about the fact that the assumed monetary agency was quite curious about the dramatic changes in banking and money at one point in the not-so-distant past only [...]

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