rising dollar

China Says ‘Thank You’

By |2016-06-03T17:25:40-04:00June 3rd, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

By any reasonable standard, today’s trading in “dollars” was highly unusual. The Chinese yuan had been trading its typical depreciation route all through the night and toward the US open. At about 6:15am, CNY was just about to touch 6.59 and a new low that would have put it back into early January territory (not good). It traded modestly higher [...]

Mainstream Expects All At Once; In the Slowdown There Are Only Bits And Pieces But Still Pointing Down

By |2016-06-01T11:48:09-04:00June 1st, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

As with China’s manufacturing, so goes global manufacturing. Rather than rebounding out of 2016’s dismal start, the failure to follow through in April and now May simply proves yet again that nothing has changed. These PMI sentiment surveys are believed to be far more precise than they really are. Even though the ISM Manufacturing PMI, for example, rose slightly to [...]

I Repeat China Repeats

By |2016-04-08T17:37:48-04:00April 8th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

China’s official reported reserves rose in March for the first time in five months. Though reserves had fallen to barely $3.2 trillion in February, that was down just $28.6 billion from January, being already hailed as a success and a step in the right direction since that was less than a third of the shocking decline in January (-$99.5 billion). [...]

Figuring Out The ‘Services Economy’

By |2016-03-29T12:29:39-04:00March 29th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Markit Services PMI flash reading for March rebounded from the sub-50 reading in February, but only slightly. The calculation continues to suggest that the “services economy” is following the manufacturing and “goods economy” even if with some lag. The internals of the survey were not any better, with the new orders component falling to the lowest level of the [...]

It Was Never About Oil Part 2; It Was Always Leverage and Volatility

By |2016-02-10T18:13:15-05:00February 10th, 2016|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

The entire point of leveraged positions is the margin of safety. That is true on both sides of that equation, as for the provider and the borrower/user. In the most famous examples of collapse, from AIG to LTCM losses were never really the issue. None of them could withstand instead collateral calls to their liquidity reserves. As noted last week, [...]

It Was Never About Oil

By |2016-02-09T17:15:51-05:00February 9th, 2016|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

The link between stock prices and oil has been especially high of late, and that has left quite a few traders and experts stumped. For a good long while any impact from oil was denied as only “transitory” or even helpful to consumers through some sort of “tax cut” effect. In January 2016, however, liquidations appeared regularly in one alongside [...]

Big Blue’s Close Experience With Dollars In Both Directions

By |2015-07-22T14:35:22-04:00July 22nd, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

IBM continues to be a bellwether assessment on domestic and global capex, though in 2015 almost everyone wishes it wasn’t. To that end, many have started to downgrade Big Blue based on age in the business cycle and, of course, currency. In many ways, the latest quarterly stumble is the mirror image of when all this started. Plotting IBM’s transformation, [...]

Other Than China, Not Much Of Port Strike Resolution In Trade Figures

By |2015-05-05T14:43:34-04:00May 5th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The port strike on the West Coast of the US was finally resolved and goods began to flow more freely starting in February. That meant March’s import figures would be absolved of this aberration and we could begin to piece together the state of domestic “demand” without the blockage. Given that January and February figures were atrocious, it would stand [...]

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