Repo

Nothing To See Here, It’s Just Everything

By |2019-01-02T17:21:43-05:00January 2nd, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The politics of oil are complicated, to say the least. There’s any number of important players, from OPEC to North American shale to sanctions. Relating to that last one, the US government has sought to impose serious restrictions upon the Iranian regime. Choking off a major piece of that country’s revenue, and source for dollars, has been a stated US [...]

Insane Repo Reminds Us

By |2019-01-02T15:19:06-05:00January 2nd, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It was only near the quarter end, that’s what made it so unnerving. We may have become used to these calendar bottlenecks over the years, but they still remind us what they are. Late October 2012 was a little different, though. On October 29, the GC repo rate for UST collateral (DTCC) surged to 52.6 bps. The money market floor, [...]

Third Stage Gold

By |2018-12-20T17:50:32-05:00December 20th, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Rather than sticking gold in with my last one on collateral, I felt it deserved its own focus. Its duality often puts it on the side of deflation with collateral shortage as the main mechanism. Given that, it wouldn’t have been surprising if gold was collapsing now as it had been during the earlier eurodollar mess after mid-April. But, as [...]

Dealer Behavior Leads Us To Another Big (Collateral) Warning

By |2018-12-20T16:58:54-05:00December 20th, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The latest liquidations began right after October 3. Oil shifted toward contango/crash, curves collapsed, even stock markets which looked like they had skated past disruptions early in the year were slammed. It was as if every market hit the same air pocket all at once, therefore identifying (global) liquidity as the major issue driven, of course, by reversing economic and [...]

More Extraordinary Still

By |2018-12-07T18:43:33-05:00December 7th, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There were rumors and whispers of a trade truce between China and the US. Wages domestically grew by the most since 2009, better than 3% last month. OPEC is going to be cutting oil production again. And most of all, for the mainstream narrative anyway, the Fed is about to go on a break. Why didn’t markets react positively to [...]

2018: The Collateral Case

By |2018-11-20T16:48:49-05:00November 20th, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Last December, something clearly broke. The global basis had swept far under zero again, an ominous sign that eurodollar banks were having trouble creating, finding, and redistributing global funding. A cross currency basis swap is one way to do it, the negative basis indicating a desperate shortage of dollars offshore (eurodollars). The negative basis wasn’t the only thing suggesting dramatic [...]

Eurodollar Futures: Powell May Figure It Out Sooner, He Won’t Have Any Other Choice

By |2018-11-19T12:52:06-05:00November 19th, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For Janet Yellen, during her somewhat brief single term she never made the same kind of effort as Ben Bernanke had. Her immediate predecessor, Bernanke, wanted to make the Federal Reserve into what he saw as the 21st century central bank icon. Monetary policy wouldn’t operate on the basis of secrecy and ambiguity. Transparency became far more than a buzzword. [...]

The Long Shadows

By |2018-11-12T16:08:24-05:00November 12th, 2018|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

The news was one of those instances when you could see they were trying a little too hard. It didn’t make any sense, not anyway in the context to which it was delivered. On September 21, unnamed German officials were supposedly championing a megamerger in the banking sector. The country’s two largest financial institutions might be brought together to save [...]

So Close, Yet So Far

By |2018-11-08T18:26:04-05:00November 8th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The effective federal funds (EFF) rate actually dipped 1 bp last Friday. Having spent the prior eight trading days equal to IOER at 2.20%, it might’ve been heartening for US central bankers under siege. After all, they adjusted that particular policy tool back in June and then in July said this whole EFF thing was due to “special factors” that [...]

Contagion

By |2018-10-29T18:42:55-04:00October 29th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The word contagion is easy enough to understand. Whether the spread of disease or disaster, sometimes it is difficult if not impossible to contain. In financial terms, contagion is often thought of along the lines of 2011; Greece started it and it spread throughout the rest of Southern Europe. The euro was coming apart, and what “it” was didn’t seem [...]

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