balance sheet capacity

More Than A Decade Too Late: FRBNY Now Wants To Know, Where Were The Dealers?

By |2019-09-23T18:28:27-04:00September 23rd, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I’ve said it all along; focusing in on bank reserves would leave you dazed and confused. It’s just not how the system works. After all, as I pointed out again not long ago, “our” glorious central bank had the audacity to claim that there were “abundant” reserves during the worst financial panic in four generations. "Somehow" despite that, it was [...]

A Trickle of Belgian Colored Deutsche Bank Speculation

By |2019-07-09T19:28:22-04:00July 9th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In October 2011, the bank’s Chairman bristled at the characterization. His was not going to be a “bad bank” as many in the financial media had been saying. Pierre Mariani, chief executive of Belgium’s Dexia, preferred instead to call it the “residual bank.” No matter the label, the firm was being bailed out for the second time by the Belgian [...]

What If There Was No Punchbowl In The First Place?

By |2019-05-30T18:21:14-04:00May 30th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The celebration was premature. As usual, people were extrapolating reflation into recovery. Getting relatively better after being really bad is not the same as truly healing. Reflation is a necessary but by itself insufficient condition for normalcy. The latter requires the former as a first step and then needs enough momentum (of opportunity) to carry it through only then completing [...]

Third Time’s The Charm, Or Is It Strike 3?

By |2019-05-01T16:49:41-04:00May 1st, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

They will have to be forced into it. There is no voluntary rate cut and there never has been. This idea, however, is what’s being offered today in the wake of another stubborn line in the sand. Central bankers are always, always the last to figure things out. Jay Powell was still talking about inflation and more aggressive monetary policy [...]

The Rest of February TIC

By |2019-04-16T19:38:59-04:00April 16th, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The rest of the TIC data was relatively straightforward, at least in viewing it as a proxy for monetary conditions offshore (spilling over, as EFF, onshore). Through February 2019, the usual: shortage of balance sheet capacity, banks cutting back cross-border US$ liabilities (except for resales), foreigners selling US$ assets as a consequence. The official sector selling the most and most [...]

Cue The Bad

By |2018-12-03T19:39:17-05:00December 3rd, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When the FOMC published the minutes for its November policy meeting, they included an unusually lengthy discussion about federal funds (effective) and IOER. I have no doubt that policymakers would rather have skipped the topic altogether. Demonstrating how little they actually control matters, the plight of EFF has forced them into an almost detailed digression. One thing they wrote with [...]

Monetary Hierarchy, Independence, And Shaming Greenspan Yet Again

By |2018-09-21T17:30:01-04:00September 21st, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In June 2003, while discussing the vote that would take the federal funds rate to its then-lowest point, 1%, Alan Greenspan committed what may have been the greatest monetary sin of modern times. The focus for much of the discussion was Japan, that country’s central bank pioneering at that early date all the things the Fed and other majors would [...]

TIC For July 2018: June Was Even Bigger Than We Thought, Meaning May 29

By |2018-09-18T17:33:50-04:00September 18th, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

You never quite know what you’re going to get with each monthly update. High frequency data tends to be noisy anyway, more so in the more exotic series. Following a month where something really changes, however, you aren’t quite sure if it will turn out to be nothing more than a phantom. Does last month’s big number get revised down [...]

ECB At A (Familiar) Crossroads

By |2018-08-31T17:05:54-04:00August 31st, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If Brazilian central bankers are the standard for illicit shamelessness, their European counterparts are at least on the same spectrum. At the end of April, the European Central Bank’s President Mario Draghi took his shot at purposeful mischaracterization. Speaking to the press after the ECB’s Governing Council meeting had concluded, Draghi had been forced to concede there had been at [...]

Anticipating How Welcome This Second Deluge Will Be

By |2018-08-28T16:36:39-04:00August 28th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Effective federal funds (EFF) was 1.92% again yesterday. That’s now eight in a row just 3 bps underneath the “technically adjusted” IOER. If indeed the FOMC has to make another one to this tortured tool we know already who will be blamed for it. The Treasury Department announced yesterday that it will be auctioning off $65 billion in 4-week bills [...]

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