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Seeing A Paradigm Shift Out of Meandering Prices

By |2015-10-29T13:17:43-04:00October 29th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Written Monday Oct 26 If China and Europe provided any boost to mainline sentiment last week, everyone looks to Japan this week for perhaps disappointment, though there isn’t any good reason why. Perhaps as a fitting description of this current situation, one that I think appears more inevitable by the day and the week, the Bank of Japan apparently sits [...]

Kuroda’s Rebuke Came Awfully Swift

By |2015-10-21T17:14:44-04:00October 21st, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There must be a universal speech template included in the monetary textbook that is shared among the various central banks. On September 28, 2015, Haruhiko Kuroda, Governor of the Bank of Japan, delivered a speech that wasn’t just similar to the press conference Janet Yellen had endured only a week or so before, it was a close enough replica that [...]

The Biggest Cost? Wasting Time

By |2015-10-16T13:32:22-04:00October 16th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There probably should be a cottage industry trying to figure out what Albert Einstein actually said or wrote quite against what is typically attributed to him (or Abraham Lincoln, Winston Churchill and many others). One such nugget purported from his genius was that compound interest is the most powerful force in the universe. That is how the sentiment seems to [...]

It Took Three Decades, But Fears of Turning Japanese Are Closer Than Ever

By |2015-10-08T15:24:39-04:00October 8th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It may be unexpected to economists, but the sudden and uniform economic downside that is either appearing or strengthening almost everywhere in the world is closely tracking the wholesale “dollar.” In many cases, that flows through China and so is given that gloss, but there can be little doubt now about either cause or effect. In Japan, machine orders (a [...]

There Is Enough Evidence To Convict The Whole Idea

By |2015-09-30T17:54:00-04:00September 30th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

While the slide in US manufacturing is being interpreted far differently as nothing to worry about, overseas the recessionary implications are forthrightly described. The contradiction is amazing simply because the same pattern is given such different interpretation even where they are closely synchronized and both given amorphous “global” growth connotations. In Japan, contraction in industry due to “global growth” is [...]

It’s Not Really Inflation; Euphemism For The Whole ‘Dollar’ Economy

By |2015-09-28T15:44:09-04:00September 28th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe declared last week that Japan is no longer suffering from deflation the day after his own government statistics showed that Japanese prices declined for the first time since QQE began. That is actually great news for the Japanese people, though Abe and Kuroda at the Bank of Japan continually pledge to end the relief. Abe’s [...]

‘Trickle Out’ Economics Is Really Politics

By |2015-09-21T13:28:33-04:00September 21st, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With global economic perceptions finally creeping toward financial perceptions (not stocks) despite the enormous and mostly ongoing “stimulus” almost everywhere, it is useful to review once more the assumed general mechanisms. Step 1 is really the most basic and traditional element of central banking, as liquidity, broadly speaking here, is currency elasticity in its more modern format. Increasing liquidity is [...]

Inside of QE Is Apparently No Better

By |2015-09-09T18:36:12-04:00September 9th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In February 2010, Bank of England chief Mervyn King was very worried about the fragile nature of the British recovery as it fit within the more nebulous global hoard. There were emerging threats from an “unexpected” setback over a tiny little country on the Aegean, perhaps depressing Europe so soon out of the depths of the global Great Recession. Mervyn [...]

Cultish Fervor

By |2015-09-09T18:05:06-04:00September 9th, 2015|Bonds, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

When the Bank of Japan announced on October 31, 2014, that it would increase the scale of QQE to ¥80 trillion annually, it noted the usual surfeit words that have clearly been passed around to everyone within network connectivity of the central axis of orthodox economics. You can honestly close your eyes and have someone read aloud the text and [...]

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