recession

Why The Last One Still Matters (IP Revisions)

By |2018-04-18T14:58:16-04:00April 18th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Beginning with its very first issue in May 1915, the Federal Reserve’s Bulletin was the place to find a growing body of statistics on US economic performance. Four years later, monthly data was being put together on the physical volumes of trade. From these, in 1922, the precursor to what we know today as Industrial Production was formed. The index [...]

For All That Seems To Go Right, What’s Always Missing?

By |2018-01-22T19:33:34-05:00January 22nd, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

On April 29, 2011, the US benchmark oil price (WTI) surged above $113 per barrel. It wasn’t just American oil prices, either, as other benchmarks around the world were on a huge run. It was the highest for crude oil in three years, going back to the weeks immediately following Lehman. At that price, more so the parabolic trajectory, it [...]

Giant Sucking Sound Sucks (Far) More Than US Industry Now

By |2017-12-05T18:22:44-05:00December 5th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There are two possibilities with regard to stubbornly weak US imports in 2017. The first is the more obvious, meaning that the domestic goods economy despite its upturn last year isn’t actually doing anything positive other than no longer being in contraction. The second would be tremendously helpful given the circumstances of American labor in the whole 21st century so [...]

Why So Much Inventory?

By |2017-09-08T12:40:32-04:00September 8th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Liquidity and more so liquidity preferences are vastly misunderstood for a whole host of reasons. A lot of it has to do with the dominant strains of Economics battling each other (saltwater vs. freshwater) over which statistical model fails less frequently. In shifting to mathematics and statistics, something great has been lost. Economists don’t understand how an economy works; and [...]

Demand Dearth

By |2017-09-05T12:44:03-04:00September 5th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The fundamental problem is that we don’t know what’s wrong. In many ways that is a worse condition because it is one step further removed from a solution. Even after ten years “we” still have to prove that the one thing everyone largely believes can’t be the depressing issue is. Earlier this year as the price of oil began to [...]

More Noise Than Signal

By |2017-08-24T21:14:27-04:00August 24th, 2017|Economy, Markets|

A number of people have forwarded this Bloomberg article - Wall Street Banks Warn Downturn Is Coming -  to me over the last couple of days. That fact alone is probably a good argument to ignore it but I can't help but read articles like this if for no other reason than to know what the crowd is thinking.  The [...]

Bi-Weekly Economic Review: Ignore The Idiot

By |2019-10-23T15:09:51-04:00August 14th, 2017|Alhambra Research, Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Stocks|

Of the economic releases of the past two weeks the one that got the most attention was the employment report. That report is seen by many market analysts as one of the most important and of course the Fed puts a lot of emphasis on it so the press spends an inordinate amount of time dissecting it. I don't waste [...]

Fourth Order ‘Rising Dollar’ Effects Hit 2017

By |2017-08-02T16:31:41-04:00August 2nd, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Total construction spending fell considerably in June 2017, according to Census Bureau estimates released yesterday. Seasonally-adjusted, layouts for new construction declined by 1.3% from May. That’s the second time in the last three months there was such a large drop. Year-over-year (unadjusted), total spending grew by just 1.2%, the lowest rate of expansion since November 2011 (subject to revisions, which [...]

Entirely Too Flimsy

By |2017-08-01T17:34:59-04:00August 1st, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For such an important set of data, the PCE stuff continues to suggest a whole lot of capriciousness. There has been a tendency to drastically revise figures such that they change not in the small ways regular revisions are supposed to produce. The whole purpose of especially benchmark revisions is to calculate a more accurate number. In the past few [...]

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