recession

China Literally Does It Again

By |2015-04-20T16:37:59-04:00April 20th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The fact that China did something will always be treated with hyperventilation, but lately that includes an almost bi-polar nature. Last week, the PBOC branch in Shanghai made what looked to be a “tightening” gesture upon Chinese stocks, ordering commercial banks, in a memo, to check for risks in margin debt. They also banned margin on unregulated accounts and “suddenly” [...]

Getting October 15 Right, Even to Crude

By |2015-04-20T11:40:28-04:00April 20th, 2015|Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It is becoming settled wisdom that the most dangerous aspects of any current financial contours are due almost entirely to some version of HFT or electronic trading. That is undoubtedly true, as far as it might relate to one aspect, but to claim that computers are the single biggest source, let along only source, of financial impropriety is obtuse. The [...]

Blame GDP

By |2015-04-17T15:50:03-04:00April 17th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I think we are getting an even better sense of what might be the most ironclad law of orthodox economics. It seems as if there is a nonlinear proportionality between the desperation in which the mainstream denies it and the farther away from recovery the economy becomes. Last year was full of denial, especially as it related to that “anomaly” [...]

US IP Too

By |2015-04-15T16:08:29-04:00April 15th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It never really was weather to begin with, a statement that applies increasingly to not just this year. The fact that prior winters were wintry should have made no difference at all to an economy that is stable and moving via organic processes. It is only the artificial trends that can be subverted by all manner of inanities (inducing the [...]

A View To The Downside

By |2015-04-14T17:05:07-04:00April 14th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With retail sales and some other recent indicators flashing deeper warnings about the current economic climate, the concerns I raised last week and before about the “bunker mentality” have increased in relevance as well as probability. Specifically, if recession on the consumer side is rightfully characterized by households taking on a “bunker mentality” then it is appropriate to suggest what [...]

The Old School Ingredients

By |2015-04-14T15:27:29-04:00April 14th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For the most part, retailers have been far more cautious about inventory than their wholesale counterparts. I don’t doubt that those two processes are actually related, with the inventory appetite swinging to wholesalers almost by default, but circumstances now dictate either a conscious break with that conduct or a convergence. With inventories already far too deep on the wholesale level, [...]

Retail Sales Among The Worst In March Too

By |2015-04-14T11:36:50-04:00April 14th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It is hard to take any one-month change as anything more than usual variation when it is so far out of alignment with everything else. Some economists are cheering the fact that retail sales rose for the first time in four months, and that it was the biggest monthly gain in a year, but both of those interpretations obscure that [...]

This Is Not Good

By |2015-04-13T15:45:18-04:00April 13th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If you go back and review the academic literature from the 1960’s up until the 1980’s as it related to monetary policy and recession, you find a rather solid foundation for credit as a means of deconstructing contractionary forces. The interface between expectations and actions had typically occurred within the realm of business credit, whereby deepening pessimism was “passed off” [...]

The Wholesale Bunker

By |2015-04-09T11:39:41-04:00April 9th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The wholesale sales and inventory figures were significantly revised this month going back more than a decade. The largest revisions were evident after 2007, which changes slightly the depth of the Great Recession and the “briskness” of the stunted recovery thereafter. Though both sales and inventory figures are much higher than previously believed (until they get revised again), the economic [...]

Rationalisierung

By |2015-04-09T10:16:54-04:00April 9th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Rhetorically, I wondered yesterday what it was that economists and the media were actually looking at when opining about certain economic topics. That was in relation to German factory orders which are clearly moving in the “wrong” direction, to which that is supposed to be set aside in favor of “sentiment” and the ephemeral “confidence.” Neither of those words really [...]

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