janet yellen

Bank Hoarding in The Mainstream

By |2015-03-13T16:50:51-04:00March 13th, 2015|Markets|

The issue of bank hoarding has become nearly mainstream as the size of the move into UST is now too large to ignore. It wasn’t so much an issue last year, apparently, as there was less to suggest taking very pessimistic portfolio allocations was anything other than an anomaly of regulation. This year the idea of prudence as opposed to [...]

Rational Expectations or Bubbles

By |2015-03-10T11:40:30-04:00March 10th, 2015|Markets|

The FOMC has been talking, so we hear, about changing “forward guidance” to indicate a potential rate hike sooner rather than later. They had already changed the basis of “forward guidance” back in September which largely negated what forward guidance actually meant. The concept is only pliable in the manner in which monetary theory has to follow “rational expectations.” Whenever [...]

Swirling ‘Dollars’

By |2015-03-03T13:15:31-05:00March 3rd, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Despite the relative peace and tranquility in dollar-denominated credit markets at present, the “dollar” itself continues to rise. Clearly the acceleration of that trend has waned in recent weeks, but nonetheless is still moving upward to the point it is at the highest level in more than a decade. Somehow most commentary takes such a massive and sustained move in [...]

Optimism/Pessimism: Stocks At Record Highs While Savings Rate Jumps

By |2015-03-02T18:07:08-05:00March 2nd, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Stocks had a great day today unshaken by whether the manufacturing part of the economy was growing more quickly or at the slowest rate in 13 months. Confusion isn’t part of the asset inflation lexicon. In economic news, the U.S. manufacturing sector had its best gains since October, according to Markit's final Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index that rose to 55.1 [...]

Chicago Really, Really Didn’t Cooperate

By |2015-02-27T16:35:47-05:00February 27th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The last time I commented on the Chicago Business Barometer (formerly the Chicago PMI) it was over a one-month drop that was quickly erased. That violated a personal rule whereby I make every effort to ignore sentiment surveys as they both do not mean what they are taken for and are usually of dubious value. The reason I commented then [...]

GDP Is Speculative

By |2015-02-27T12:34:57-05:00February 27th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I think the ongoing destruction in the Japanese Household sector demonstrates very well a specific shortcoming about economic statistics like GDP. The basic calculation of the particular measure that forms the headlines of almost all commentary is a comparison of the current quarter to the previous one. That right away opens the door to incongruities as there remain very definite [...]

CPI Really Didn’t Cooperate

By |2015-02-26T11:55:16-05:00February 26th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Say what you want about the CPI as it relates to inflation, the actual calculation is set up to measure essentially what GDP measures. That is why economists take their calculations of “inflation” as almost literal substitutes for actual economic activity. There is little denying the close correlation between economic activity especially in recession and the dramatic slides in CPI [...]

Durable Goods Won’t Cooperate Either

By |2015-02-26T11:17:23-05:00February 26th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Yesterday in trying describe Janet Yellen’s testimony to Congress about the economy, pundits apparently were forced to concede that the “data won’t cooperate”, thus leaving the economy in Yellen’s head to be wholly different than anything described elsewhere outside the media echoes. Today’s release of durable goods provides yet another data point that “will not cooperate” with the dreamland of [...]

Yellen Can’t Get Cooperation

By |2015-02-25T18:12:50-05:00February 25th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

Janet Yellen’s testimony concluded, no one gets any more clarity about what the FOMC actually thinks. However, that itself is in one sense an indication as she vacillated a little too much about making a firm commitment to either the recovery or “transitory” oil prices. QE3 ended months ago and we are seven years into this thing already, but there [...]

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