global liquidity

Chart Roundup: Bonds Are Indeed Confident

By |2020-02-20T17:52:16-05:00February 20th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Making the rounds on Twitter yesterday (h/t to M. Simmons) was a quote attributed to Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari. I can’t find any confirmation for it so it could be one of those fake news tweet situations. And the only reason I include it here is because it sounds like something he would say; the urge to pile on [...]

Real Liquidity Cuts Across Many Boundaries; So Does The Lack of It

By |2019-08-02T12:59:58-04:00August 2nd, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Things that happen in one place happen in every place. That’s been the second hardest thing to get people to realize. The first is that central banks are not central. And the reason they aren’t is because of this other factor. It truly is a global system and it’s made that way by its very nature. Credit-based money means that [...]

China Reopens With Another Sneeze

By |2018-06-19T19:22:00-04:00June 19th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If it seemed a bit calmer yesterday in global markets than has become typical, it was likely due to the absence of Chinese influence. China’s markets were closed for the country’s annual Dragon Boat festival, a holiday tradition that supposedly dates back 2,000 years. According to state media, it’s not strictly Chinese any longer. The celebrations have apparently spread all [...]

Is Reflation #3 Over? Some Important Data Is Pointing Toward That Possibility

By |2018-06-19T13:28:42-04:00June 19th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

As a starting point, the TIC data is enormously helpful. Not only does it provide some badly needed level of detail, the series’ focus is right in the area where everything matters. Ostensibly about Treasuries being bought and sold in foreign places, quite by accident the Treasury Department has captured an introductory measure of offshore “dollar” money. What’s truly helpful [...]

Can We Blame Japan For The Liquidations (and HKD)? Right Now It Sure Seems That Way

By |2018-04-18T18:17:59-04:00April 18th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

February was a very interesting month, wasn’t it? There was the pause or even end of the inflation hysteria driven home by “unexpected” liquidations in markets all over the world. On top of those, LIBOR-OIS blew out and all the absurd explanations put forth for it, and even outright lies. Needless to say (write), I’ve been waiting for the TIC [...]

Why Might Hong Kong Still Be Interesting?

By |2017-07-19T19:14:03-04:00July 19th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When the People’s Republic of China (PROC) was granted full UN status in 1971, everything was then set in motion. The successor to Chaing Kai-shek’s nationalist government in the Republic of China (ROC, or what we call today Taiwan) was originally granted as a founding member and one of five Security Council seats. UN General Assembly Resolution 2758 instead recognized [...]

Weird Obsessions

By |2017-06-26T17:51:51-04:00June 26th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

People often ask why I care so much about China. In some ways the answer is obvious, meaning that China is the world’s second largest economy (the largest under certain methods of measurement). Therefore, marginal changes in the Chinese economy are important to understanding our own global situation. But it goes much deeper than that. I have described my own [...]

China And Reserves, A Straightforward Process Unnecessarily Made Into A Riddle

By |2017-03-07T18:01:05-05:00March 7th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The fact that China reported a small increase in official “reserves” for February 2017 is one of the least surprising results in all of finance. The gamma of those reserves is as predictable as the ticking clock of CNY, in no small part because what is behind the changes in those balances are the gears that lie behind face of [...]

Data Tick In November TIC

By |2017-01-18T18:37:53-05:00January 18th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

November was the month where global bonds, particularly sovereign bonds, were routed in synchronized liquidation. As such, we would expect to find among various data sources evidence to suggest a monetary “dollar” background consistent with that fact. What that has meant in the months (and last several years) leading up to it was the foreign official sector in overdrive “selling [...]

Economists Canada Problem (Con’t)

By |2016-12-27T18:39:33-05:00December 27th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Canada’s economy remains the distinct enigma of the developed world, where the binary business cycle breakdown is perhaps most conspicuous. When oil prices first crashed to end 2014 and start 2015, even economists expected Canada’s economy to suffer, so exposed as it was and remains to the energy sector. But after two rough quarters to begin last year, that was [...]

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