yield curve

The Hawks Circle Here, The Doves Win There

By |2022-01-21T18:44:35-05:00January 21st, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

We’ve been here before, near exactly here. On this side of the Pacific Ocean, in the US particularly the situation was said to be just grand. The economy was responding nicely to QE’s 3 and 4 (yes, there were four of them by that point), Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke had said in the middle of 2013 it was becoming [...]

Good Time To Go Fish(er)ing Around The Yield Curve

By |2022-01-20T20:01:52-05:00January 20th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It should be as simple as it sounds. Lower LT UST yields, less growth and inflation. Thus, higher LT UST yields, more growth and inflation. Right? If nominal levels are all there is to it, then simplicity rules the interpretation. Visiting with George Gammon last week, he confessed to committing this sin of omission. Rates have gone up, he reasoned [...]

Eurodollar Futures Curve Update (spoiler: still inverted)

By |2022-01-14T20:00:49-05:00January 14th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I guess I took my own advice a little too literally. I did write that when the eurodollar futures curve first inverted, it was going to be dull. Didn’t start out that way, of course, with a small bit of theatrics right during that front week in December when the inversion first showed up. Ever since then, it has stuck [...]

The Historic Christmas Binge

By |2022-01-14T17:00:05-05:00January 14th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The reason that store shelves are occasionally empty, as any social media hashtag trend will tell you, is that Americans are still buying an amazing amount of goods. For December 2021, Christmas was hardly canceled. The Census Bureau today reported that retailers during the biggest month of last year, of every year, grabbed an astoundingly huge $714 billion in overall [...]

It’s Not Perfume But It Does Smell Funny: Conundrum #5

By |2022-01-10T17:50:00-05:00January 10th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When Alan Greenspan sat in front of the politicians in Congress back in February 2005, he purposefully made it seem like what was taking place at that time was some kind of new and unusual development. Yeah, the guy who had previously become famous for fedspeak – the ability to use a lot of words while saying nothing – would [...]

Conflict Of Interest (rates): 10-year Treasury Yield Highest in Almost Two Years

By |2022-01-07T18:11:11-05:00January 7th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The dollar was high and going higher. Emerging markets had been seriously complaining. In one, the top central banker for India outright warned, “dollar funding has evaporated.” The TIC data supported his view, with full-blown negative months, net selling from afar that’s historically akin to what was coming out of India and the rest of the world. China was cutting [...]

The Historical Monetary Chinese Checklist You Didn’t Know You Needed For Christmas (or the Chinese New Year)

By |2021-12-22T18:37:20-05:00December 22nd, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If there is a better, more fitting way to head into the Christmas holiday in the United States than by digging into the finances and monetary flows of the People’s Bank of China, then I just don’t want to know what it is. Contrary to maybe anyone's rational first impression that this is somehow insane, there’s much we can tell [...]

Start Long With The (long ago) End of Inflation

By |2021-12-21T19:57:18-05:00December 21st, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With the eurodollar futures curve slightly inverted, the implications of it are somewhat specific to the features of that particular market. And there’s more than enough reason to reasonably suspect this development is more specifically deflationary money than more general economic concerns. What I mean is, those latter have come later (“growth scare”) only long after the world’s real money [...]

One Shock Case For ‘Irrational Exuberance’ Reaching A Quarter-Century

By |2021-12-17T20:28:27-05:00December 17th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Have oil producers shot themselves in the foot, while at the same time stabbing the global economy in the back? It’d be quite a feat if it turns out to be the case, one of those historical oddities that when anyone might honestly look back on it from the future still hung in disbelief. Let’s start by reviewing just the [...]

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