liquidity

Repo Watch: Day 5

By |2015-04-08T14:57:54-04:00April 8th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With a week to go before April 15, GC repo rates remain undisturbed from their recent elevated fashion. The rate of decline has also slowed appreciably, down to just a few pips today, as volume continues to be stable at an also raised level (compared to recent conditions). And despite the FOMC minutes, the eurodollar curve has only moves 1-2bps [...]

Funding vs. Funding

By |2015-04-07T15:42:09-04:00April 7th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For the fourth consecutive trading session, repo rates remain in an elevated state though there isn’t any obvious reason they are doing so. GC rates in all three classes were essentially unchanged from Monday, which leaves them unfamiliar with repo mechanics that existed prior to March 25. There was a sharp surge up to just shy of 25 bps (MBS) [...]

Learning Liquidity

By |2015-04-02T16:48:21-04:00April 2nd, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

From a purely, detached analytical perspective it is highly fascinating the possibility of observing a liquidity “development” in almost realtime whether one develops or not. If past patterns hold, and there isn’t any specific expectation for that other than heightened probability due to systemic recurrence, then April 15 is a target point for the next one in the series. This [...]

Razor Thin ‘Dollar’ And the FOMC’s Statement

By |2015-03-24T14:54:18-04:00March 24th, 2015|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Credit and funding markets have been pretty much defined by “dollar” behavior for most of March in the same manner that defined December and early October. At the outset, it looked as if credit markets had turned the “other” way with interest rates rising and some of the downstream “markets” no longer under such steady pressure. The culmination of that [...]

More Realtime ‘Dollar’ Figures

By |2015-03-20T15:55:34-04:00March 20th, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With funding markets and currencies showing pessimism once more with regard to the “dollar”, waiting for confirmation from TIC presentations is less than desirable. The Federal Reserve offers an alternate measure listed on its H.4.1 as a memoranda item. It tracks what the Fed holds in direct custody for foreign central banks and other “official” accounts and conduits. The holdings [...]

Cliffs

By |2015-03-19T10:44:26-04:00March 19th, 2015|Markets|

So far the heavy buying after yesterday’s FOMC admission has held on the eurodollar curve. Most of the contracts along the curve have only given back a few bps after the 15-25 bps moves everywhere yesterday afternoon. The salient interpretation of trading along these lines is one of deep and abiding concerns over “dollar” liquidity and the economy. With the [...]

Bank Hoarding in The Mainstream

By |2015-03-13T16:50:51-04:00March 13th, 2015|Markets|

The issue of bank hoarding has become nearly mainstream as the size of the move into UST is now too large to ignore. It wasn’t so much an issue last year, apparently, as there was less to suggest taking very pessimistic portfolio allocations was anything other than an anomaly of regulation. This year the idea of prudence as opposed to [...]

Looking More Like Next ‘Dollar’ Problem

By |2015-03-10T17:04:14-04:00March 10th, 2015|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

It is Tuesday which only means that whatever oil trading takes place today will be easily overwhelmed by whatever interpretation about inventory levels released tomorrow dominates. However, the last week has been interesting in the respect of a shift in the behavior of the futures curve for WTI. Up until then, almost all volatility was concentrated in the front months, [...]

It’s Not A Stock Bubble But A Bigger Corporate Bubble

By |2015-03-03T17:46:15-05:00March 3rd, 2015|Bonds, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

With liquidity running somewhat perilously noncommittal since June, you would think the riskiest parts of the credit market would be most affected. That is incorrect and once again stands out as to the bubbly nature of the current age. Aside from liquidity draining enthusiasm into and around October 15 and December 1, high yield debt has not only repriced itself [...]

Where There’s A Rising ‘Dollar’ There Is Short Collateral But Plentiful ‘Reserves’

By |2015-03-03T16:40:03-05:00March 3rd, 2015|Bonds, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Federal Reserve is running another large-scale test on its Term Deposit Facility (TDF), the account by which it intends to establish a European-style floor to its also intended interest rate corridor. Judging by the fact that nobody has paid any attention to this test or the one that preceded it, except for those that were fooled into thinking the [...]

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