trade

Japan Forever; And For Us?

By |2014-12-24T12:07:10-05:00December 24th, 2014|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I suppose this was not really a surprise given how the Japanese people seem to have simply accepted their fate, economically speaking, so the resounding re-election of Abe’s party removes any further sympathy from a people dooming themselves to this sustained, toxic course. The election itself was not all about the economy in immediate consideration as there were several other [...]

Not Just The Franc Showing Euro Concerns

By |2014-11-14T18:29:24-05:00November 14th, 2014|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With Europe reporting GDP, reactions have been somewhat varied. In some places, it was taken as not as bad as feared, while others were downright cheered by a lack of total collapse, as if that is now the standard for economic progress. Since GDP tends to be noisy in the short run, the major components, the economic base, continues to [...]

Textbook Demolition

By |2014-10-22T11:00:13-04:00October 22nd, 2014|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The chatter that continues over Japan’s spiral into (further) economic impoverishment is simply astounding since it is taken as “expert” by the media. A credentialed economist will look at some numbers and simply take them as meaningful, especially if they are the “right” sign in the “right” direction. This is either wholly obtuse or intentionally misleading. Stronger exports would support [...]

‘Markets’ Want More Yen Debasement?

By |2014-09-18T12:19:59-04:00September 18th, 2014|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The good news in Japan for August trade figures is that imports fell 1.5% Y/Y, but that was balanced by an almost identical 1.3% Y/Y decline in exports. Confounding all orthodox expectations, the yen’s radical devaluation did nothing to press divergence between imports and exports as it was “supposed” to. Instead, imports matched exports, at best, and where it counted [...]

They Really Should Begin to Model The Inverse

By |2014-08-20T12:08:08-04:00August 20th, 2014|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

As I noted yesterday with US housing construction, there has been a very unusual amount of emphasis added to the month-to-month changes of various indications. Maybe that is no more than normal, but it seems as if the confidence displayed in the minutiae has been amplified. Given the circumstances, that is both understandable and reprehensible at the same time. The [...]

Japan’s ‘Surge’ Undone

By |2014-06-27T12:00:01-04:00June 27th, 2014|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The juxtaposition of the official unemployment rate in Japan against wage gains (losses, more precisely) raises an interesting and potentially debilitating conundrum. More workers are being employed inside Japan, but the average pay rate clearly is falling for new jobs. This, of course, sounds very familiar to Americans that have seen exactly that process play out in our versions of [...]

What’s Left After the Currency Circus Leaves Town?

By |2014-05-28T10:17:16-04:00May 28th, 2014|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The running narrative all over the developed world is temporary factors. In the US it is weather-related, while Europe is seized by not enough euphoria (more on that later), and Japan by the tax increase attempt at fiscal responsibility. In the Japanese case, as it relates to the ever-important trade balance, the record debilitation in the first quarter under an [...]

US Trade Rebound Only Partial; Oil Involved

By |2014-05-09T15:35:56-04:00May 9th, 2014|Currencies, Economy, Markets|

April trade data for Chinese exports purportedly show a rebound forming, though its size and even legitimacy is still much in doubt. The fake Hong Kong invoice scandal of last year is making comparisons to this year difficult, but that doesn’t and won’t quell the extrapolations. The export data are “somewhat inconsistent with the weakness seen in new export orders” [...]

Death of Ceteris Paribus

By |2014-04-21T11:21:01-04:00April 21st, 2014|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It was the introduction of two Latin words that doomed the modern discipline of economics. As the mathematical modeling craze swept into what is now econometrics, the derivation of theories and, more importantly, the statistical “evidence” of those theories rested upon ceteris paribus – “with other things the same.” It is difficult to accept even the basic proposition that one [...]

China’s Trade, Dollar and Japan Problems

By |2014-03-10T16:41:57-04:00March 10th, 2014|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

So far in China this year there have been defaults and “bailouts” in the credit markets, but they are tiny in relative comparison to everything else. That they have occurred at all is why they have grabbed so much attention. We all have some inkling of the credit and monetary inequities that are roiling inside the Chinese economic gut, but [...]

Go to Top