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Worry Walls Don’t Explain Repeated Falls

By |2022-04-05T18:02:12-04:00April 5th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Someone once said that the stock market is always climbing a wall of worry. Maybe that had been true in some long-ago day, but whether or not it might nowadays is beside the point. The nugget of truth which makes the prosaism memorable is the wall rather than the climber. There’s always something going on somewhere to get worked up [...]

Is There More To It?

By |2022-01-31T18:25:41-05:00January 31st, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Chinese authorities responded to their faltering economy in 2018 by diverging from their Western counterparts. Their PBOC would lean into rate cuts (RRR) at the very same time America's Federal Reserve would accelerate more in the direction of rate hikes. The ECB, for Europe’s part, intended to follow the Fed’s path, reaching December 2018 and terminating its own QE with [...]

Retail And Food Sales: If It’s Not Inflation, And It’s Not, Then What Is It?

By |2021-10-15T17:08:46-04:00October 15th, 2021|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

OK, so we went through the ways and reasons consumer price increases are not inflation, cannot be inflation, are nowhere near actual inflation, and what all that really means. The rate they’ve gone up hasn’t been due to an overactive Federal Reserve, so it has to be something else. This is why, though the bulge has been painful, it’s already [...]

All Eyes On Inventory

By |2021-09-23T19:33:50-04:00September 23rd, 2021|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

You’ve heard of the virtuous circle in the economy. Risk taking leads to spending/investment/hiring, which then leads to more spending/investment/hiring. Recovery, in other words. In the old days of the 20th century, quite a lot of the circle was rounded out by the inventory cycle. Both recession and recovery would depend upon how much additional product floated up and down [...]

Behind, Inflation’s Best Days

By |2021-08-23T19:55:58-04:00August 23rd, 2021|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Slowdown, yes, but by how much? The inflation argument has been forced to change yet again after having been put together by expectations for a “red hot” economy to stay red hot for a prolonged period. That’s no longer in the data, as even the most robust of indications – such as sentiment – have clearly cooled off. What’s left, [...]

Business Or Inflation Cycle?

By |2021-07-29T20:26:41-04:00July 29th, 2021|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Was the GDP report good or bad? Six percent sure sounds terrific, given it wasn’t all that long ago two and a half or three was perceived a home run. As with any of these things, the ultimate judgement depends on more than single numbers because everything is relative. The fact is the BEA calculated a headline quarterly change which [...]

ISM’s Nasty Little Surprise Isn’t Actually A Surprise

By |2021-07-06T17:14:23-04:00July 6th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Completing the monthly cycle, the ISM released its estimates for non-manufacturing in the US during the month of June 2021. The headline index dropped nearly four points, more than expected. From 64.0 in May, at 60.1 while still quite high it’s the implication of being the lowest in four months which got so much attention. Consistent with IHS Markit’s estimates [...]

Potential Fallout From PMI Wars

By |2021-06-03T20:13:06-04:00June 3rd, 2021|Markets|

It’s not really a war so much as somewhat of a disagreement. And it’s not an unfamiliar one, as time and again these things tend to come down to timing. The global economy remains synchronized, only certain parts of it go ahead first before others then the rest end up joining. Carried into the realm of PMI’s, diverges in sentiment [...]

Finding Tame American Inflation In Chinese Industrial Sentiment

By |2021-04-30T16:36:39-04:00April 30th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Trillions in “stimulus”, American consumers buying goods at a frenetic pace (in lieu of services), gasoline prices punishing, the start of favorable base effects, yet all those things couldn’t push the inflation rate much further beyond the Federal Reserve’s 2% explicit target. And remember, in order to meet the newly designed economic goals on the inflation side – average inflation [...]

Well, That Clears Up Nothing

By |2021-04-29T20:14:58-04:00April 29th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Disappointing some, US real GDP managed to come in 6.2% higher in Q1 2021 when compared to Q4 2020. This was slightly less than the “consensus” which had figured around 6.6% growth and then the more optimistic calculations including the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow tool that had only yesterday pointed to 8% (with some outlier whispers dialing up double-digit gains). Even [...]

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