Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy

BEA Backs Up Census; Residual Seasonality Struck A Month Too Soon

By |2019-03-01T12:38:25-05:00March 1st, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Over the last decade, the US economy has been experiencing “residual seasonality.” It has begun each year unusually weak. For Economists expecting it take off in each and every one, this is more than a thorny contradiction. When it happened again in 2015, at the worst possible moment for the mainstream view, they had finally had enough. The Bureau of [...]

The Best Year In Over A Decade Confirms The Economy Still Near The Worst

By |2019-02-28T16:35:02-05:00February 28th, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

A month behind schedule, Q4 GDP sure did disappoint. I don’t mean that it was disastrously weak, rather it came in right down the middle benefiting neither camp. The BEA’s not preliminary but not quite second revised GDP estimate for Q4 2018 was 2.55617% (seasonally adjusted compounded annual rate) above Q3. Not strong enough to dispel every growing worry, at [...]

No Surprise, Hysteria Wasn’t a Sound Basis For Interpretation

By |2019-02-27T17:11:06-05:00February 27th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

What gets them into trouble is how they just can’t help themselves. Go back one year, to early 2018. Last February it was all-but-assured (in mainstream coverage) that the US economy was going to take off. The bond market, meaning UST’s, was about to be massacred because the overheating boom would force a double shot down its throat. Not only [...]

Jay Powell Is In The Way (Literally, for the UST Curve)

By |2019-02-27T12:54:39-05:00February 27th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Early in May 2013, the word “taper” exploded into the mainstream. It was everywhere, scarcely an article written or news story pieced together which hadn't included the term (even though Ben Bernanke never actually said it). The so-called tantrum spread like wildfire simply because of what it represented, the very thing everyone had been waiting for. Confirmation at last the [...]

The Many Obvious Dots of Keynes, Friedman, And Fisher

By |2019-02-26T17:18:26-05:00February 26th, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The obsession with inflation is grounded in historical fact. This is true both of our recent “conundrum” as well as broader circumstances surrounding slow burning structural changes. As to the former, last year the global economy was supposed to take off, concurrently signaled by accelerating inflation rates due to what are always claimed to be tight labor markets. The worldwide [...]

The Fate of Real Estate

By |2019-02-26T12:18:57-05:00February 26th, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For years, realtors have been waiting for more housing inventory. It had become an article of faith, what was restraining a full-blown recovery was the lack of units available. The level of resales like construction was up, but still way, way less than it was now fourteen years past the prior peak despite sufficient population growth to have absorbed the [...]

Explaining All The Facts

By |2019-02-25T19:17:16-05:00February 25th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

St. Louis Fed President James Bullard was in New York last week, making a presentation to the US Monetary Policy Forum. A well-known dove, speaking to CNBC while attending the conference, as a current voting member of the FOMC Bullard announced his dissenting view to the last “rate hike.” He was not eligible to vote in December, rotating into this [...]

Not Surprisingly, It Wasn’t Italy

By |2019-02-25T16:39:18-05:00February 25th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It’s so obscure now, I actually had to go back and reread what was going on there at the time. On May 29, the mainstream consensus was how Italian populists were screwing up Europe. Global bond markets were supposed to be selling off, massacred as global recovery took hold. Instead, worldwide the most liquid, safe instruments had been hugely bid [...]

Even Biased Upward, Something’s Up With US Manufacturing

By |2019-02-22T16:14:56-05:00February 22nd, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In February 2015, IHS Markit thought that the US manufacturing sector might be slowing quite against every expectation. Its final PMI reading for the month of January was 53.9, down quite a bit from highs registered in the middle of 2014. Some of those fears seemed put to rest the following month when the flash reading for February 2015 rebounded [...]

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