Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy

COT Black: Crude Balance Here?

By |2017-11-10T18:06:41-05:00November 10th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Oil prices have had a very good run for several months now. Dating back to the recent low reached June 21, WTI is up an impressive 35% to a new two-year high. Crude hasn’t traded at $57 since June 2015. During this latest increase, the oil futures curve has finally achieved backwardation (which isn’t necessarily permanent). The long-awaited normalization is [...]

Not The Usual Hollow Words

By |2017-11-10T13:10:51-05:00November 10th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Communist Chinese government views banking as a core industry, the securities business a core concept of banking. Their domestic sector has therefore been given preference and protection despite market reforms adopted elsewhere in China’s economy. Foreign bank presence has been ostensibly nothing, a fact that the government I believe wanted as a measure of symbolic openness rather than head [...]

The Inflation of China’s Condition

By |2017-11-09T18:38:35-05:00November 9th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

One day after the China’s government reported disappointing but consistent trade figures, that country’s National Bureau of Statistics published inflation estimates that are being branded at least on this side of the Pacific as some degree of “hot.” As is usually the case, the characterization is wildly off. China is no closer now to an inflation problem, thus solid growth, [...]

The Glut Lives Still In Imagination

By |2017-11-08T18:32:43-05:00November 8th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

While I commend the mainstream media for refraining the past few months from their orthodox tendencies to shout BOND ROUT!!! every time long Treasury yields rise for more than a few days at a time, that doesn’t mean the total absence of the ridiculous. With the long end once again trending lower in nominal yields, the curve has utterly collapsed [...]

Consumer Credit Both Accelerating and Decelerating Toward The Same Thing

By |2017-11-08T17:36:36-05:00November 8th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Federal Reserve revisions to the Consumer Credit series have created some discontinuities in the data. Changes were applied cumulatively to December 2015 alone, rather than revising downward the whole data series prior to that month. The Fed therefore estimates $3.531 trillion in outstanding consumer credit (seasonally-adjusted) in November 2015, and then just $3.417 trillion the following month. Of that $114.3 [...]

Full(er) Appreciation of the Geographical ‘Dollar’ Dimension

By |2017-11-08T11:37:47-05:00November 8th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The American view of the “rising dollar” period is one of truly understated appreciation. I wouldn’t be surprised if many of us didn’t realize there was ever a downturn to begin with, let alone one that flirted with proportions reaching recession. After all, the most widely felt effects didn’t manifest and really sting until the labor market slowdown dragged into [...]

Everything Now On Slack

By |2017-11-07T18:43:37-05:00November 7th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The whole thing really does unravel at the unemployment rate. If it indicates the correct view of the economy, even close to “full employment”, then what follows is fairly typical and orthodox stuff. In the context of what the Fed is doing, short-term rate hikes are leading the longer end of the yield curve toward a more hopeful future (though [...]

The Economics Definition of Sanity: Keep Doing The Same Thing Over and Over Because It Has To Work One of These Times

By |2017-11-07T12:46:27-05:00November 7th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

We live in an age of statistics. They are everywhere, including a whole lot of junk numbers (endless studies) that don’t pass minimum scrutiny. Somehow, statistics have become the gold standard for at least the mainstream media in framing our view of everything from new discoveries to further exploration into how things work. That’s fine for a discipline like quantum [...]

Europe Is Booming, Except It’s Not

By |2017-11-06T19:51:30-05:00November 6th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

European GDP rose 0.6% quarter-over-quarter in Q3 2017, the eighteenth consecutive increase for the Continental (EA 19) economy. That latter result is being heralded as some sort of achievement, though the 0.6% is also to a lesser degree. The truth is that neither is meaningful, and that Europe’s economy continues toward instead the abyss. At 0.6%, that doesn’t even equal [...]

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