janet yellen

The Fuss About Wages Is The Fuss

By |2015-08-03T12:26:49-04:00August 3rd, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The latest FOMC policy statement was dominated by a single, added word; “some.” As far as actual policy maneuvers I doubt it will make much of a difference, but it certainly adds more flavor to the growing evidence the US economy isn’t anywhere near close to what it should have been by now. In other words, even the mainstream economic [...]

At This Point, What Difference Does ‘Some’ Make

By |2015-07-29T15:07:05-04:00July 29th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Despite being the last FOMC meeting before the ever-expected rate hike in September , there was a whole bunch of nothing in markets before and even after the policy statement. Even the typical knee-jerk was less than on prior meetings. Maybe traders have come to expect so very little from the policy statement, focusing more on the inanities and silliness [...]

Gold Warns Again

By |2015-07-20T12:45:23-04:00July 20th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With all the problems right now beyond Greece and China, from Canada’s “puzzling” recession to Brazil’s unfolding disaster, and even the still-“shocking” US economic slump, it is interesting that gold garnered the most attention in early Monday trading. The fact that gold prices were slammed in Asian trading was certainly significant, but that really isn’t why gold is being highlighted [...]

Credit In The Middle

By |2015-07-14T17:13:49-04:00July 14th, 2015|Bonds, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Where money markets seem to be regularly unsettled, credit markets are quite the opposite. Those two polar interpretations may, in fact, be quite related as credit markets are not really supposed to be so placid. Yet, here we find them again lacking much determination in any one direction. Inflation breakevens which were steadily rising from January 15 to May 6 [...]

Retail Sales Start To Suggest Now More Than Recession

By |2015-07-14T11:22:31-04:00July 14th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Last month’s retail sales report for May was taken as the definitive sign that the slump had passed and that the conventional view of the jobs market was finally, if surprisingly belatedly, taking shape. It did not matter to economists that the only basis for that interpretation was seasonal adjustments, which had produced a huge disparity with the unadjusted set. [...]

Treasury Has Problems With Computers, But Huge Bubbles Are Beyond Any Scope

By |2015-07-13T17:17:01-04:00July 13th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The US Treasury Dept. released its awaited report on October 15 today. I started to read through its 72 pages but it became clear rather quickly this wasn’t anything but, frankly, junk. The ultimate message is simply one of “computers.” In other words, there is no discussion, apart from simple bland references here and there, about what really transpired on [...]

First IMF, Then Yellen, Now Oil Downgrades the Economy

By |2015-07-10T16:41:01-04:00July 10th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With a lull in Greek information and general craziness, as well as China essentially shutting down its stock exchange (no longer much as far as exchange) “dollar” pressure has abated. That is obvious in the treasury market which has seen a retracement in yields without collateral calls, but also somewhat in the related commodities. Copper prices are back up to [...]

Yellen: Recovery We Thought of Past Few Years Wasn’t Really There

By |2015-07-10T15:46:50-04:00July 10th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There should be no more “ifs”, no more caveats and qualifications. After trillions of printed illusions through four QE’s and now almost seven years of ZIRP, she still can’t say for certain whether the economy is actually performing. However, the fact that Janet Yellen won’t say so is all the evidence you need, as for surely by now, especially given [...]

Still The Same Greece, Still The Same Math

By |2015-07-08T12:58:06-04:00July 8th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In April 2008, Nassim Taleb was becoming a household name criticizing the quant dominance in finance. Bear Stearns had just failed and the entire edifice of mathematical order was still breaking down, as the last bastions of credit default swap “supply”, the monoline insurers, were still rumored to be heading for insolvency (while the nightly news focused on whether that [...]

Go to Top