recovery

The Increasingly Unpredictable Politics of Money

By |2016-12-06T19:15:00-05:00December 6th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Since the ECB began the Public Sector Purchase Program (QE) in the middle of March 2015, it has purchased (through the end of November 2016) almost €1.2 trillion in securities from the financial sector. In addition to that, the central bank has bought €46.2 billion in corporate bonds, and €148 billion of covered bonds in a third iteration in that [...]

Between Hope And Growth Is Where It All Is

By |2016-12-02T18:29:11-05:00December 2nd, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

After two months of “unexpected” weakness, the ISM Manufacturing Index rebounded in November. With both September and October below 52, after August’s reading was less than 50, the increase to 53.2 is being welcomed as another sign of distance from the start of the year, if not reflation and growth itself. That belief, however, is and has been misplaced throughout [...]

…And A Cheap Stunt

By |2016-11-07T16:52:28-05:00November 7th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

As if anyone needed any proof as to why economics needs to be so thoroughly debunked, it was on display again today. I am talking about Rome over Carthage defeat, where the textbooks of Economics (capital “E”) should be so salted and devastated in the same manner in which the Romans banished the Carthaginians forever to nothing but history. Economics [...]

September FOMC: Do We Have The Guts To Actually Believe In Our Own Fallacies?

By |2016-10-12T15:53:30-04:00October 12th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The US is awash in economic data that shows its economy isn’t close to matching the rhetoric of policymakers. FOMC minutes for the September policy meeting show largely what I have been writing for almost two years. Rate hikes aren’t about the economy as it is, they are about the economy that “should be”, the one that “full employment” denotes [...]

Durable Goods Add To The Idea of Depression (Small ‘d’)

By |2016-06-24T17:03:34-04:00June 24th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There wasn’t anything new or surprising in the advance durable goods report. Shipments (ex transportation) were flat and orders were up 1% year-over-year (NSA). Capital goods (non-defense, ex aircraft) shipments fell 3.4%, the tenth straight month of contraction, while new orders were down again (2.6%) for the sixteenth time out of the past nineteen months. The slump only continues. With [...]

Fed’s Own Models Contradict Their Rhetoric

By |2016-06-17T18:39:05-04:00June 17th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The June FOMC meeting coincides with the quarterly update of the Federal Reserve’s modeled economic and policy projections. As usual, the economy forecasts have been cut for both 2016 and 2017. The upper bound for the “central tendency” of real GDP in 2016 was 3% in the modeled calculations made at the end of 2014, those that saw no fallout [...]

Irregular Home Construction Might Be QE Leftovers

By |2016-05-17T18:59:40-04:00May 17th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Home construction estimates continue to suggest the same kinds of economic imbalances unchanged from last year. While construction of single family homes had been rising, that increase was not nearly as widespread and voluminous to indicate that the real estate market had been restored by full economic restoration (jobs, jobs, jobs). Apartment construction, on the other hand, has been scaled [...]

Not Even The Smallest Hint of Cyclicality Anymore

By |2016-05-09T16:32:55-04:00May 9th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It is absolutely clear that the eurodollar system last functioned on August 8, 2007. Starting August 9, nothing would ever be the same. In describing and detailing how it got that way (the sudden fragmentation between “dollars” in NYC and London, for example) there is a natural tendency to compartmentalize even realizing the drastic implications of what it all meant. [...]

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. [...]

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 [...]

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