Markets

Resting Upon GDP Services

By |2016-01-05T18:32:38-05:00January 5th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There no longer is any doubt about the state of industry and manufacturing in the US as well as the rest of the world. The most diehard, stubbornly optimistic economists have now completely given up on the “goods economy.” Instead, they have been forced to try to explain why such a slump would show up exactly when it shouldn’t, and [...]

Forward China

By |2016-01-05T17:34:56-05:00January 5th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The market for bankers’ acceptances was one of the first tasks of the Federal Reserve. There was a flourishing financial trade in acceptances in sterling which was purely a matter of the British pound being something like the global reserve currency, at least for a vast portion of global geography. With the United States becoming an industrial and trading power, [...]

Forget Rate Hikes, It’s Really The ‘Neutral’ Interest Rate Now

By |2016-01-04T18:27:47-05:00January 4th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In September 1979, the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis published a paper that attempted to clarify the monetary and economic characteristics of repurchase agreements. The name itself offers little but further confusion as prior to the 1990’s repos could be classified as either collateralized loans or actual sales and purchases depending on individual circumstances. In some cases, the two [...]

CNY Fix and SHIBOR Suggest Blaming PMI’s Is Half The Story

By |2016-01-04T16:19:22-05:00January 4th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

There does seem to be internal financing adjustments going on inside the arcane and cumbersome framework of CNY to US$. Whether or not that is desirable remains to be seen, but the case of the past few weeks suggests, and somewhat strongly, that the PBOC is again losing control. What it is almost certainly like trying to squeeze a balloon, [...]

The Economy Would Be In Recession If It Weren’t So Robust

By |2016-01-04T12:53:52-05:00January 4th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In the manufacturing sector we find the most supreme test of economic credentials. Despite what is clearly taking place, the mainstream, orthodox outlook and assessment continues to dominate. There isn’t any doubt anymore about the manufacturing sector, as recession not only is broad enough there on its own it continues to deepen and darken. Yet, because Janet Yellen declared the [...]

A Very Difficult Year

By |2016-01-03T19:40:25-05:00January 3rd, 2016|Markets|

I’ve been writing a weekly commentary now for almost ten years and I’ve missed very few weeks in that time. That’s a lot of Sundayafternoons and my lovely wife of 28 years has been very understanding. About four years ago she convinced me to take the last two weeks of the year off to enjoy the holidays with family. For the [...]

A Year In Junk

By |2015-12-31T17:36:29-05:00December 31st, 2015|Bonds, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The most important outbreak or story of 2015 had to have been the junk bond reversal. It combined all the major elements of what investors and economic agents are both fearing and, at one point in the past anyway, hoping. It is the confluence of finance, “dollars”, liquidity and economics with or without recovery and the best scenario. The FOMC [...]

China’s Offshore Confusion

By |2015-12-31T17:00:59-05:00December 31st, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

China’s government or the PBOC moved to suspend three foreign banks from participating in cross-border currency transactions. From what I have seen, and nothing has been confirmed, rumors have suggested that Deutsche Bank was one of the three. The move has, as usual, created all manner of confusion in how to frame what the PBOC or Chinese regulators might be [...]

Resetting Production And Risk Perceptions

By |2015-12-31T16:16:12-05:00December 31st, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

While we await a flood of data for December spending and retail activity to confirm what we already suspect by proxy, the updated figures for November going backwards in the production process stand as yet another warning. Retail sales figures were typically abysmal, as were private indications of spending. The Thompson Reuters Same Store Sales Index, a measure of actual [...]

The Inescapable Trap of the ‘Dollar Short’; Japan as China?

By |2015-12-30T18:36:27-05:00December 30th, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Before World War II, in Japan there were four large conglomerates situated as vertically-integrated family-centered monopolies. Called zaibatsu, they were Mitsui, Mitsubishi, Sumitomo, and Yasuda, and many other smaller rivals. Each group would not just own companies in all industries, they would also organize and contain an assimilated banking concern (horizontal integration) to carry out capital and funding needs for within [...]

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