dark leverage

COT Blue: A Decade of Weird

By |2018-03-16T16:17:47-04:00March 16th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

On July 15, 2008, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke sat in front of Congress for the second of his required Humphrey-Hawkins reports for that year. The original act meant for these to be more than bland economic obfuscation, where the original Full Employment and Balanced Growth Act of 1978 demanded monetary targets. The Fed stopped being able to produce them [...]

The Big German Zombie

By |2018-02-02T18:23:21-05:00February 2nd, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It’s kind of a cheap shot to go back and rehash corporate statements from way back in the past. Still, when the topic is banking and why the monetary system refuses more than intermittent and minor progress, it’s worth the revisit. What’s different now than before 2008, really August 2007, is far more than regulation. It’s the attitude that’s changed. [...]

TIC For August (China’s Belgian Hong Kong Dollars)

By |2017-10-23T18:08:58-04:00October 23rd, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Chinese have been on a UST buying spree of late, having announced to the world several months into it that they were intent on keeping it going. The idea in publicly endorsing and really highlighting their official activity was as a currency policy – to stabilize CNY against its highly disruptive tendency toward devaluation (which isn’t really devaluation). How [...]

TIC For August (Background)

By |2017-10-23T18:09:31-04:00October 23rd, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Treasury International Capital (TIC) report produced somewhat of an anomaly in its update for August 2017. There was a lot going on during that month, mostly as UST yields fell (even though interest rates have nowhere to go but up, supposedly) while CNY continued its blistering ascent. As to the latter, it was quite clear by then Chinese actions [...]

Less Than Square One

By |2017-10-17T17:49:11-04:00October 17th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Goldman Sachs was the latest Wall Street bank to jump on low volatility. Despite an enormous gain in prop trading, most of the rest of the firm’s results were moving in the wrong direction. In its market making segment, for example, the firm booked $2.1 billion in net revenue in the third quarter, 22% less than what it took in [...]

What Else Needs To Be Said? Why It Will Continue, Con’t

By |2017-10-16T18:38:16-04:00October 16th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If the essence of modern eurodollar money is bank balance sheet capacity, then we need not wonder what has gone wrong or why. The very heart of this global currency system no longer beats so healthy and strong. Global banks shrink rather than expand at a breakneck pace, their desire to do the latter restrained by the incapacity of the [...]

Not All Swaps Are Created Equal; Part 2 (Eurodollar University)

By |2017-08-29T16:23:10-04:00August 29th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Part 1 is here. The real clue as to what was going on monetarily was provided in early 2008 not by a Federal Reserve statement about some new program it was hastily putting together (except by proxy of what it meant for conditions in private wholesale markets that the Fed thought it necessary to hurriedly arrange some new liquidity program, [...]

Not All Swaps Are Created Equal; Part 1 (Eurodollar University)

By |2017-08-29T16:23:51-04:00August 29th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I’ve never understood the myth of central bank dollar swaps. They are automatically placed in the category of QE or IOER, perhaps because very few seem to understand what was really happening with them (as well as outside of them). The Fed expands its balance sheet which everyone assumes is the same as expanding either base money or something like [...]

No Surprise, Wells Fargo

By |2017-07-28T14:13:12-04:00July 28th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In September 2016, Wells Fargo fired 5,300 employees. These sorts of mass layoffs have become common in banking throughout the post-crisis era, especially those years of the “rising dollar.” This was different, however, as Wells was not cutting back in capacity but dealing with the aftermath of being far too aggressive. These employees were found to have opened secret and [...]

Inferring the Relative State of the ‘Dollar’ Shortage In Q1

By |2017-07-12T14:55:11-04:00July 12th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The OCC reports that total gross notional derivatives outstanding jumped by nearly 8% in Q1 2017 over Q4 2016. At $178 trillion, that is even more than the reported total for Q3 last year. The latest estimates largely confirm the idea that bank balance sheets were relatively more accommodative in 2017 than especially later 2016. Among the more buoyant categories [...]

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