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Unfortunately, It Was Only A Brief Moment of Clarity

By |2016-05-11T17:54:21-04:00May 11th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I have referred to the June 2003 FOMC meeting many times before and I suspect that I will continue to do so long into the future. It was one of those events that should be marked in history, truly relevant to the future developments that became panic and now sustained economic decay. It’s as if the committee members at that [...]

Getting Far Too Caught Up In The One Step Forward

By |2016-05-03T16:15:01-04:00May 3rd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It seems as if some “markets” are having a difficult time coping with the different speed at which the economy is changing. Maybe that should be expected given the dramatic transformation of them into often computer-driven frenzies of headline scans. But this is something else, made so by the nature of this current economic condition as divorced from our experience. [...]

The Weakness Is Really Different Now

By |2016-05-02T19:15:16-04:00May 2nd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If there is any wonder why PMI’s deserve scorn, this morning’s twin bill delivered solid reasoning. Both the ISM Manufacturing Index and the Markit Manufacturing PMI declined, and both remained above 50. However, there was no real consensus about what any of it meant. Depending on the media outlet determining commentary about either, there was both positive and negative spin [...]

They Want It To Be About Inflation

By |2016-04-29T18:25:13-04:00April 29th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There was more bad news for the FOMC over the past few days beside the once again near-zero GDP estimate. If the labor market were truly growing as is claimed, we should be finding “inflation” in a broad set of different economic views. From the standard inflation calculations to various estimates for wages or income, by now it should be [...]

Sentiment vs. Liquidity

By |2016-04-27T16:44:13-04:00April 27th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

On January 16, 2009, the FOMC gathered telephonically for an emergency conference call to discuss a deal that had been struck between Bank of America and the FDIC, Federal Reserve, and US Treasury Department. There was enormous concern, quite well-founded, that had nothing been done the news of that day might have led to a place nobody wanted to go. [...]

Where It All Went Wrong

By |2016-04-26T15:49:48-04:00April 26th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With the housing recovery, it is perhaps because it has been much more visible and earnest that the disparity is more easily appreciated and understood. Prices have surged in some places as much as the housing mania portion of the great bubble of the 2000’s, yet that has taken place despite levels of overall activity at only fractions of that [...]

Pseudo Recovery

By |2016-04-25T17:19:32-04:00April 25th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There has always been something off about the housing rebound from the depths of the crash. It was, of course, aided in good part by various QE’s that had the effect of skewing marginal benefits of the housing recovery to “investors” and especially institutional investors with the best, cheapest access to credit. From a cycle perspective, the great bubble ended [...]

The Benefits Already Sparse On The Plus Side, Europe Flirts With Widespread NIRP

By |2016-04-25T12:35:39-04:00April 25th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Unilever is a rather typical multinational conglomerate trying to weather this “recovery” as best as it can. It is, of course, quite jarring to realize that any business so positioned might have to “weather” any recovery, but that is the state that they are presented with. Reporting Q1 results last week, the company improved slightly to almost 5% in underlying [...]

Leave It To The Bank Of Japan

By |2016-04-22T17:26:42-04:00April 22nd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Japan has seemed unusually put upon by Mother Nature over the past few years, for which we can only express our sincerest sympathy. However, Japan’s most pressing problem is entirely man-made stemming from the fact that it was first among the world’s “developed” nations to have its economy subsumed by central banking. More than a quarter of a century later, [...]

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