pboc

The Contingent Hole In China’s Brazil Dollar Strategy

By |2020-09-11T17:35:20-04:00September 11th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Brazil strategy isn’t, of course, truly Brazilian. Like the Spanish flu which became famous for where it was first noticed and reported rather than where it originated, this monetary policy was thought up elsewhere and Banco do Brasil is merely the central bank which decided it was worth sharing.What is this Brazil (my term, by the way) policy? “Contingent [...]

Xi Has Upped His (Ruthless) Game; Dollar Scarcity, Chinese Economy, and the World Surrounding All of It

By |2020-08-25T19:19:03-04:00August 25th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There’s one key piece of the “petroyuan” story which has gotten lost in the frenzied hype. While many get fixated, and make others fixate, on how RMB-for-oil was going to, or maybe even still will, destroy the dollar there’s been important, legitimate functions for Shanghai’s International Exchange which don’t involve, and never really did, replacing the reserve currency. It’s all [...]

Not This Again: Time For Petroyuan Revisit

By |2020-08-20T19:54:15-04:00August 20th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Does anyone remember the petroyuan? It doesn’t appear so, though not because the thing disappeared rather due to the fact that it didn’t. It was a really big deal for a time, pretty much all of 2018. What it was supposed to have represented was the dollar’s death knell. Guaranteed, one hundred, no, one thousand percent dead. This was widely [...]

What’s In The Same Number? China’s Part In The (euro)Dollar Story

By |2020-08-04T19:26:42-04:00August 4th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There’s one part of the dollar story I’ve not yet touched on recently. We’ve already heard, too much, about how the Fed’s killing the dollar, or at least is aiming to with all its immense money printing fire power. While it’s the euro which has demanded so much from DXY that it almost seems plausible (to a few) this time, [...]

More To Being De-dollared

By |2020-07-21T19:04:15-04:00July 21st, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It’s understandable to an extent. Central banks are omnipotent, central bankers therefore the nearest human equivalent of gods. That’s what we’re all taught, so if something happens somewhere to some market then we’re left to believe it was because one of the gods wanted it that way.Taking this globally, the Fed made a bunch of money in the aftermath of [...]

How Do You Say (Way) Off-balance Sheet In Chinese?

By |2020-06-24T19:38:33-04:00June 24th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Where central banks are concerned, it’s not conspiracy theory so much as the term “off-balance sheet.” There’s a reason Enron kicked off that mass-migration into the footnotes. For monetary officials, there’s the choice to be like Montagu Norman and what he thought of good practice at central banks. Silence.For years, the Chinese have tried it the other way. Big Mama [...]

What Do China’s LPR Cut & Oil Chaos Share In Common?

By |2020-04-20T16:39:01-04:00April 20th, 2020|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For the second time this year, the PBOC has today affirmed Chinese banks are offering a lower benchmark loan rate. The Loan Prime Rate was reformed last August just in time for the monetary authorities in China to make it seem like they are being removed from the decisions. And in time for rate cuts to begin, too. What is [...]

What’s *Really* Going On In China?

By |2020-04-17T16:29:12-04:00April 17th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Questioning the veracity of Chinese estimates (for anything) has always been something of an amateur sport. For a stat like real GDP, everyone “knows” that it is managed. In a complex world where an economic system for a billion and a half is incomprehensibly unpredictable, there’s really no other way to always hit your government’s mark (unless the Chinese are [...]

China’s First Virus-Filled Economic Data May Not Be All That Helpful

By |2020-03-02T12:21:30-05:00March 2nd, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There were only two possibilities and both related to their release. Either the Communist Chinese government was going to delay them, or would just say, screw it, everyone knows they’re going to be bad so let ‘em fly. There weren’t any questions about the data itself. Sure enough, the first glimpse at China’s economy in its full virus effects was [...]

Zombie Insurance, Or Not

By |2020-02-24T17:01:25-05:00February 24th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It’s another example of the difficulties in trying to evaluate and analyze non-economic factors. China’s virus outbreak is a nightmare for those unfortunately living through it, and Chinese officials aren’t doing themselves any favors. Trust is a sketchy enough concept. The WHO today says there is no pandemic, which, as Erik Townsend of MacroVoices points out, immediately puts this announcement [...]

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