richard fisher

Three Quarters of a Trillion In Three Weeks, And Bill Yields Are Down Again

By |2020-04-16T18:48:03-04:00April 16th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Hold all the congratulations. Jay Powell is, with a huge assist from the financial media, trying to pre-empt what comes next by taking a premature victory lap. The Fed isn’t just your central bank it is your friend. The amount of pure propaganda being put out lately is understandable if still disgusting. March was a good month to include [...]

COT Blue: The Velocity of Capitulation

By |2019-02-11T16:13:32-05:00February 11th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

On Friday, the CFTC posted its COT data for the first week in 2019. For crude oil, capitulation. For US Treasury bond futures, capitulation. In the latter financial market, unsurprisingly the net market position utterly collapsed during December. From a relatively high (meaning market overall short) +58k contracts that last week in November when everyone piled into liquidity hedges, the [...]

The Bookkeeper’s Pen, But Which Bookkeeper?

By |2019-01-11T18:38:02-05:00January 11th, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In the chaotic days of the early “recovery”, those opposed to the Federal Reserve’s response largely fell into the wrong camp. The central bank had done too much, they claimed. Never mind how the first global panic in four generations had developed and then crushed the global economy, such deflation was over to be taken apart by rapid inflation if [...]

To Money Or Not Money, That Is The Question

By |2016-03-30T12:39:37-04:00March 30th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When former Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher stepped down last March after a decade in that role, the New York Times (of course) wrote his professional obituary under the headline Richard Fisher, Often Wrong But Seldom Boring. Fisher had apparently viewed his own philosophical root and career at the Fed as something of an updated Paul Volcker, not surprising given [...]

Credit Rundown of Opposing Propositions That Aren’t Necessarily Opposed

By |2014-09-23T21:45:39-04:00September 19th, 2014|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There is an interesting dichotomy taking shape in credit markets, including those around the globe (that will be a separate post). Some of this, I think, relates to what FOMC member Richard Fisher related today about concerns over asset bubbles. I think the Economic Times of India summed him up the best: Already there are signs of financial excess in [...]

The Dollar Transition

By |2013-06-30T19:07:55-04:00June 30th, 2013|Markets|

Interest rates, as measured by the 10 year Treasury note, are up roughly 100 basis points (1%) from the low yields set last year of about 1.4%. That has everyone and his brother calling for the end of the great bond bull market that has been going on all my adult life. The 10 year Treasury note peaked in yield [...]

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