yield curve

Inside and Outside, Market and Models Actually Agree On A Final Failing Grade For Yellen

By |2017-12-14T19:24:56-05:00December 14th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It was another pretty embarrassing day for the Federal Reserve and its policymaking body the FOMC. The latter voted, as expected, to raise the federal funds corridor (or double floor, if you can’t get over IOER fail) by another 25 bps. The long end of the Treasury bond market, however, was bid pushing yields down not up. There is a [...]

Seriously, Wherefore Art Thou Collateral?

By |2017-12-07T17:35:32-05:00December 7th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I’m going to go out on a limb and claim there is something seriously wrong in repo. All jokes aside, I know it sounds like a broken record but the dimension that matters is not intermittent collateral problems so much as the greater intensity to them and in a condensing timeframe. Escalation is a description you really don’t want to [...]

Waiting For Godot’s Wages

By |2017-12-06T15:36:07-05:00December 6th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Though the BEA revised GDP slightly higher for Q3 2017, the government agency took hourly compensation out to the woodshed. On a quarterly basis, this metric of labor market wage pressures is often quite volatile. In Q4 last year, for instance, nominal hourly compensation was -4.5% Q/Q (annual rate), followed immediately by a 4.9% gain in Q1 2017. For Q3 [...]

Bi-Weekly Economic Review: Who You Gonna Believe?

By |2019-10-23T15:09:46-04:00December 5th, 2017|Alhambra Research, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Taxes/Fiscal Policy|

We've had a pretty good run of data recently and with the tax bill passing the Senate one would expect to see markets react positively, to reflect renewed optimism about economic growth. We have improving economic data on pretty much a global basis. It isn't a boom by any stretch of the imagination but there is no doubt that the [...]

Three Years Ago QE, Last Year It Was China, Now It’s Taxes

By |2017-12-04T18:57:43-05:00December 4th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

China’s National Bureau of Statistics reported last week that the official manufacturing PMI for that country rose from 51.6 in October to 51.8 in November. Since “analysts” were expecting 51.4 (Reuters poll of Economists) it was taken as a positive sign. The same was largely true for the official non-manufacturing PMI, rising like its counterpart here from 54.3 the month [...]

Just When You’ve Thought You’ve Seen It All

By |2017-12-04T17:18:07-05:00December 4th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

I could understand it if its track record was spotty, or partially mixed. But the level of denial runs deep and wide with the yield curve. There is a growing chorus of nonsense, really, which is attempting to spin the flattening as some kind of benign technical rotation that through illogical convolution equals the opposite of what is obvious. Let’s [...]

Inflation (Expectations) Corroborate Risk, Which Corroborates Inflation

By |2017-11-28T18:35:55-05:00November 28th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

On Thursday, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) will report on Personal Consumption and Personal Income (as well as the difference between those two, the Personal Savings Rate). Accompanying the economic figures will be the usual estimates for consumer prices, in this case the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge the PCE Deflator. There isn’t expected to be much good news [...]

Global Asset Allocation Update

By |2019-10-23T15:07:31-04:00November 28th, 2017|Alhambra Portfolios, Alhambra Research, Economy, Markets, Taxes/Fiscal Policy|

There is no change to the risk budget this month. For the moderate risk investor the allocation to bonds is 50%, risk assets 45% and cash 5%. The extreme overbought condition of the US stock market did not correct since the last update and so I will continue to hold a modest amount of cash. Prediction is very difficult, especially [...]

Bi-Weekly Economic Review: A Whirlwind of Data

By |2019-10-23T15:09:46-04:00November 21st, 2017|Alhambra Research, Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Markets, Stocks|

The economic data of the last two weeks was generally better than expected, the Citigroup Economic Surprise index near the highs of the year. Still, as I've warned repeatedly over the last few years, better than expected should not be confused with good. We go through mini-cycles all the time, the economy ebbing and flowing through the course of a [...]

The Bond Market Does, In Fact, Use The Correct Start Date

By |2017-11-21T18:13:37-05:00November 21st, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

First Bernanke, now Yellen. As I wrote earlier today, there is a growing tendency to revise economic history at least as it applies to official actions. Ben Bernanke defends QE from the perspective of 2009 forward, as if 2008 was all just someone else’s problem irrelevant to the world that came after. In effectively resigning from the Fed Chair position [...]

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