us treasuries

Are Central Bankers About To Spike The Ball At The 30-yard line (again)?

By |2022-02-22T18:50:50-05:00February 22nd, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Nobody, and I mean nobody, does premature celebrations like central bankers. When it comes to their non-money monetary policies and the inflation they seek to create from them, time and again officials in every jurisdiction spike the ball at least 30 yards before they reach the endzone. Whenever one or another consumer price measure ticks up, or accelerates dramatically as [...]

The Money *All* Agrees: Taper Rejection Meets Policy-Error Error

By |2022-02-18T19:02:09-05:00February 18th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Balance sheet capacity as an intangible (and deeply misunderstood) monetary property is the biggest motivating factor behind changes in or to the offshore, shadow ledger-money reserve system. The eurodollar. Since it is a distributed ledger shared amongst, and kept by, the big-bank global banking cabal, its members’ ability to expand their own individual balance sheets contributes to the overall increase [...]

The Global Money Spec-TIC-le In December

By |2022-02-15T18:07:05-05:00February 15th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Treasury Department released its broad TIC data today for the month of December 2022. Omicron fears, bond yields dropping despite the Fed’s rate hikes and an accelerating US CPI. Sure enough, more than a few segments of TIC consistent with those general outlines.Let’s begin with one of those which doesn’t have an immediate explanation; or, put another way, can’t [...]

Federal Reserve’s Own Inflation Expectations Surveys More Agree w/Euro$ Futures Inversion Than Rate Hikes

By |2022-02-14T19:14:27-05:00February 14th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The FOMC is going to hike rates maybe even aggressively. There’s not much dispute on this assumption. Why the Committee might be doing so, that’s a whole detailed debate. The Treasury yield curve is building toward inversion while the crucial (and leading) Euro$ futures curve is already substantially upside down.Both are increasingly confident market bets against the FOMC’s position(s).Jay Powell [...]

Sky High CPI and the Surging Conflict of Interest (rates)

By |2022-02-11T13:25:50-05:00February 11th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

NOTE: This post was written on Thursday, February 10. This isn’t typical. Both the speed at which this has come about and the depth to which the it has now sunk, the yield curve’s wild flattening is simply breathtaking. Today’s accelerating CPI print accelerated the distortions all over the Treasury market such that it has taken a shape along key [...]

From Container Prices To Inflation Expectations And The Yield Curve, They All Dwell On October

By |2022-02-07T18:44:00-05:00February 7th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

This thing, this massive supply disruption is a perfect example of a positive feedback loop. It began with government (over)reaction to COVID, as noted here impacting both supply and demand. Those two curves have behaved in classic fashion, inelastic supply unable to efficiently respond to an artificial outward shift in demand. The resulting impact price-wise as pure economics (small “e”).A [...]

All The Curves, From Supply To Demand To Yield

By |2022-01-28T17:52:25-05:00January 28th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Technically speaking, the rebound from the 2020 recession wasn’t strictly a supply shock. That was a huge part of it, no doubt, but a near-concurrent demand shock, if you will, also materialized. The combination of the two left the public bewildered, believing it an actual inflationary impasse which could only be further passed on into this year.Consumer prices did rise, [...]

Heightened Conflict Of Interest (rates): When GDP’s Almost All Inventory

By |2022-01-27T20:30:10-05:00January 27th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Given yesterday’s Census Bureau data on retail and wholesale inventory, there was a solid though not necessarily good reason to suspect how today’s BEA report on US real GDP might surprise to the upside. The way GDP is tabulated, inventory contributes to the figured increase; the bigger the inventory build, the higher calculated output goes. The fourth quarter’s increase in [...]

After Today’s FOMC, Yield Curve Is Already As Flat As It Was In Mar ’18 **Without A Single Rate Hike Yet**

By |2022-01-26T20:16:40-05:00January 26th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It’s not hard to reason why there continues to be this conflict of interest (rates). On the one hand, impacting the short end of the yield curve, the unemployment rate has taken a tight grip on the FOMC’s limited imagination. The rate hikes are coming and the markets like all mainstream commentary agree that as it stands there’s nothing on [...]

Bitcoin Like(s) TIPS

By |2022-01-25T20:16:54-05:00January 25th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Oil has easily, it appears, rebounded after having moved lower in November. It bottomed out that first big day of omicron fear on December 1 (ironically, or not, the same day the eurodollar futures curve inverted). Since a low of just over $65 (WTI), crude’s front futures price is easily back in the $80s thereby threatening to make January’s US [...]

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