qe

Home Construction Headwind

By |2015-04-16T11:49:15-04:00April 16th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The latest figures from the Census Bureau on home construction continue to suggest that the home sales number from last month was, at best, a one-off abnormality. If new home sales were heading appreciably higher in what might have been perceived as a sustained advance, you would expect that new home construction would at least closely follow to take advantage [...]

Direct Evidence for the Supercycle

By |2015-04-16T10:58:43-04:00April 16th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When categorizing intuition about the real economy, it is often regarded as a combination of both structural and now cyclical problems. There was, as yet, no true recovery owing largely to factors that continue to linger beyond historical comparisons about what “should” have occurred in and after the Great Recession. Some economists refer to deleveraging especially of households as that [...]

Good-bye April 15 and Thanks for Nothing But Leftovers

By |2015-04-15T17:06:30-04:00April 15th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I had hoped that something would have happened by now and that April 15 would follow more closely the October 15 and January 15 events, if only for the sake of experimentation. We don’t really need any additional illiquidity and certainly nothing as globally severe as those, but with function the way it is and everything so stretched and imbalanced [...]

Unextrapolating Bubble Expectations

By |2015-04-13T17:08:53-04:00April 13th, 2015|Bonds, Economy, Markets, Stocks|

No inflection is ever expected in the real economy since everything is always extrapolated in straight lines by orthodox economists using econometrics. Similar interpretations are being used in stocks, and not just in the “earnings recession” that is already declared “unexpected.” In terms of share prices, there is little doubt about what is holding up the S&P 500 and larger [...]

This Is Not Good

By |2015-04-13T15:45:18-04:00April 13th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If you go back and review the academic literature from the 1960’s up until the 1980’s as it related to monetary policy and recession, you find a rather solid foundation for credit as a means of deconstructing contractionary forces. The interface between expectations and actions had typically occurred within the realm of business credit, whereby deepening pessimism was “passed off” [...]

Draghi No Longer Bernanke’s Best Friend

By |2015-04-10T17:49:08-04:00April 10th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

We ran into this complication during Bernanke’s partial “confession” about his brand of QE, namely that what failed was not the power of the Fed overall but rather to extend the power of the Fed beyond merely the financial. He is trying to claim that QE wasn’t really impactful after having totally assured anyone who would listen contemporarily that it [...]

Rationalisierung

By |2015-04-09T10:16:54-04:00April 9th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Rhetorically, I wondered yesterday what it was that economists and the media were actually looking at when opining about certain economic topics. That was in relation to German factory orders which are clearly moving in the “wrong” direction, to which that is supposed to be set aside in favor of “sentiment” and the ephemeral “confidence.” Neither of those words really [...]

If Sentiment Were A Currency

By |2015-04-08T16:50:18-04:00April 8th, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

The ECB having announced and then implemented at least some kind of QE plan, the entire economist community has adjusted their economic projections upward in uniform, flocking fashion. They haven’t had to make much of an adjustment because they never downgraded economic expectations much to begin with. That is why almost every news story about the economy (and not just [...]

Plausible Deniability

By |2015-04-07T16:53:47-04:00April 7th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The March FOMC statement that caused a serious inflection in so many places was a reality check upon not monetary policy but economic fluency. In some ways it is subtle by design, but the changes made between the policy statement in January and that in March were more obvious and open. I have to wonder how much the then-surging “dollar” [...]

Twelve Years Unheeded

By |2015-04-06T17:20:08-04:00April 6th, 2015|Bonds, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The June 2003 FOMC meeting is one of those events that has only taken on increased relevance and significance with time. That gathering marked a major shift in monetary policy as it was, particularly with relation to the fomented housing bubble, as the FOMC was debating the zero lower bound. The discussion centered around the proposed monetary alignment that would [...]

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