money dealing

Greater Detail On Eurodollar Anecdotes

By |2015-10-30T10:47:54-04:00October 30th, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Written Wednesday Oct 28 Credit Suisse has stumbled in its initial restructuring effort. Forced by Swiss regulators to deleverage more quickly, the bank has turned to several unenthusiastic steps in order to comply. The Swiss banking unit will see a partial public flotation not to “unlock value”, as is commonly described, but rather to satisfy systemic banking requirements in the [...]

The Problem Revealed

By |2015-10-15T12:33:54-04:00October 15th, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

JP Morgan announced back in February that the firm would be scaling back, particularly in “non-operational” deposits. These were not retail deposits in the traditional sense from regular folks doing actual banking, but rather institutional “deposits” linked to shadow conduits and wholesale functions. The idea, along with some other restructuring measures, was to cut about $5 billion in costs over [...]

Swap Spreads Implicate Huge ‘Dollar’ Divergence

By |2015-10-09T17:41:56-04:00October 9th, 2015|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

You wouldn’t know it from stock trading or commodities, but when China reopened after its latest Golden Week holiday there was an obvious effect. Stocks have continued to surge while commodities overall have had a good week (copper up another $0.07 today, with WTI at about $50). Inside the money markets, however, China’s open was met with far less enthusiasm, [...]

Deutsche’s 2014 Desperation May Reveal A Great Deal About the Current ‘Dollar’ Situation

By |2015-10-07T19:00:24-04:00October 7th, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With China prepared to open again after a weeklong holiday absence, the breaking news from Deutsche Bank signaling a huge loss expectation for Q3 is not good timing. As noted previously, China’s various wholesale “dollar” fill, in the end, is truly dependent on a good and robust “dollar” environment appearing sometime soon. Deutsche was one of the last global holdouts [...]

Goodnight Janet; Credit Follows The ‘Dollar’ Now

By |2015-09-29T14:27:43-04:00September 29th, 2015|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

On this side of the “dollar” world, credit markets have all but written Janet Yellen into irrelevance. Despite her pleas (because of?) last week, there isn’t any part of money dealing or fixed income that is taking her “certainty” about recovery and “inflation” as even a partial setting. So lost is the FOMC, that everywhere you turn these markets are [...]

Volatility As ‘Money’; Or Really Rising Vol As Anti-Money

By |2015-08-31T18:23:54-04:00August 31st, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I think it is worth re-examining at this point, with a lull in the “dollar” at the moment, the effects of dark leverage upon actual bank mechanics and thus actual “dollar” supply. The idea of liquidity in the wholesale system is multi-dimensional and often confusing as it relates to what is typically believed. For example, the week the world woke [...]

When The Yen Was A Last Resort Safety Bid, You Know It Was Bad

By |2015-08-27T15:05:02-04:00August 27th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It looks like the reversal of Monday’s dramatic and frightful liquidation has held and gained in the past two days. From that we can infer, of only the near-term, that those forced repositions were enough to square the liquidity imbalance from the latest “dollar” run. The two words are related not just in a common semantic root, as liquidations are [...]

Into The ‘Dollar’ Run Now More Than Illiquidity?

By |2015-08-24T12:17:39-04:00August 24th, 2015|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

We have been talking about a global “dollar” run for the better part of two weeks, and at least a major “dollar” disruption looming going back three months. To say that any of the latest chaos is “unexpected” is intentionally obtuse, but it has already happened. As it is, I think we can expect FRBNY and the Treasury to issue [...]

A Wrinkle In The Eurodollar Supply

By |2015-07-16T11:43:50-04:00July 16th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Goldman Sachs reported weak earnings today, following Bank of America Merrill Lynch yesterday. The core problem at each is their dealer businesses, though it is difficult to get at that central function in the lumpy, conglomerated mess that passes for (incomplete) financial statements. Goldman’s FICC “revenue” dropped by almost a third in the second quarter from a Q2 2014 that [...]

July 15 Is Still Quite Interesting Even If Not To Be Disorderly

By |2015-07-14T16:46:03-04:00July 14th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With Greece settled and China moving away, for now at least, from the edge, it appears as if the “dollar” has settled back from the collateral calls of last week. That would make July 15 as seemingly as much of a dud as April 15 was, both in sharp contrast to October 15 and then January 15. That does not [...]

Go to Top