Tag Archive: Markets
The Hawks Circle Here, The Doves Win There
Weβve been here before, near exactly here. On this side of the Pacific Ocean, in the US particularly the situation was said to be just grand. The economy was responding nicely to QEβs 3 and 4 (yes, there were four of them by that point), Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke had said in the middle of 2013 it was becoming more than enough, creating for him and the FOMC coveted breathing space so as to begin tapering both of those ongoing programs.A...
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Weekly Market Pulse: Fear Makes A Comeback
Fear tends to manifest itself much more quickly than greed, so volatile markets tend to be on the downside. In up markets, volatility tends to gradually decline.
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Good Time To Go Fish(er)ing Around The Yield Curve
It should be as simple as it sounds. Lower LT UST yields, less growth and inflation. Thus, higher LT UST yields, more growth and inflation. Right? If nominal levels are all there is to it, then simplicity rules the interpretation. Visiting with George Gammon last week, he confessed to committing this sin of omission.
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Weekly Market Pulse: A Very Contrarian View
What is the consensus about the economy today? Will 2022 growth be better or worse than 2021? Actually, that probably isnβt the right question because the economy slowed significantly in the second half of 2021. The real question is whether growth will improve from that reduced pace.
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US CPI Reaches Seven On US Goods Prices, With Disinflation Setting In Everywhere Else (incl. US Services)
How is that US Treasury rates out in the independent longer end of the yield curve have now βsufferedβ a seven percent CPI to go along with double taper and triple maybe quadruple (if the whispers are to be believed) rate hikes this year, yet have weathered all of that allegedly bond-busting brutality with barely a market fluctuation?
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Chinaβs Petroyuan, Uncle Samβs Checkbook, The Fedβs Bank Reserves: Who Really Sits On King Dollarβs Throne? (trick question)
A full part of the inflation hysteria, the first one, was the dollarβs looming crash. The currency was, too many claimed, on the verge of collapse by late 2017, heading downward and besieged on multiple fronts by economics and politics alike.
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Sentiment v. Substance: Checking In On Collateral Via, Yes, The Fed
The Federal Reserve, like other central banks around the world, it does lend out the securities it owns and holds. Sophisticated modern wholesale money markets are highly collateralized, so much so that collateral itself takes on the properties of currency.
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Conflict Of Interest (rates): 10-year Treasury Yield Highest in Almost Two Years
The dollar was high and going higher. Emerging markets had been seriously complaining. In one, the top central banker for India outright warned, βdollar funding has evaporated.β The TIC data supported his view, with full-blown negative months, net selling from afar thatβs historically akin to what was coming out of India and the rest of the world.
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Taper Discretion Means Not Loving Payrolls Anymore
When Alan Greenspan went back to Stanford University in September 1997, his reputation was by then well-established. Even as he had shocked the world only nine months earlier with βirrational exuberanceβ, the theme of his earlier speech hadnβt actually been about stocks; it was all about money.The βmaestroβ would revisit that subject repeatedly especially in the late nineties, and it was again his topic in California early Autumn β97.
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Previewing Payrolls By PMIs
With the monthly Friday Payroll Ritual lurking tomorrow morning, and having been focused on PMI estimates before it, a quick look at the ISMβs Non-manufacturing PMI especially its employment index to bridge the latter to the former. The update today for the month of December put the headline estimate at 62.0, down from 69.1 the month prior.Omicron?While a rather sharp and unexpected 7-point drop, other than the size of the decline at 62.0 thereβs...
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As The Fed Seeks To Justify Raising Rates, Global Growth Rates Have Been Falling Off Uniformly Around The World
Sentiment indicators like PMIβs are nice and all, but theyβre hardly top-tier data. Itβs certainly not their fault, these things are made for very times than these (piggy-backing on the ISM Manufacturingβs long history without having the long history). Most of them have come out since 2008, if only because of the heightened professional interest in macroeconomics generated by a global macro economy that can never get itself going.
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How Many More Americans Might Have Quit Their Jobs Than The Huge Number Already Estimated, And What Might This Mean For FOMC Taper
There were a few surprises included in the BLS JOLTS data just released today for the month of November (note: the government has changed its release schedule so that JOLTS, already one month further in arrears than the payroll report, CES & CPS, will now come out earlier so that its numbers are publicly available for the same monthly payrolls before the next CES & CPS get released).
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As The Fed Tapers: What If More Rapid (published) Wage Increases Are Actually Evidence of *Deflationary* Conditions?
Since the Federal Reserve is not in the money business, their recent hawkish shift toward an increasingly anti-inflationary stance is a twisted and convoluted case of subjective interpretation.
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Taper Rejection: Mao Back On Chinaβs Front Page
Chinese run media, the Global Times, blatantly tweeted an homage to Chinaβs late leader Mao Zedong commemorating his 128th birthday. Fully understanding the storm of controversy this would create, with the Communist governmentβs full approval, such a provocation has been taken in the West as if just one more chess piece played in its geopolitical game against the United States in particular.No. The Communists really mean it. Maoβs their guy again....
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White-Hot Cycles of Silence
Weβre only ever given the two options: the economy is either in recession, or it isnβt. And if βnotβ, then weβre led to believe it must be in recovery if not outright booming already. These are what Economics says is the business cycle. A full absence of unit roots. No gray areas to explore the sudden arrival of only deeply unsatisfactory βbooms.β
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The Historical Monetary Chinese Checklist You Didnβt Know You Needed For Christmas (or the Chinese New Year)
If there is a better, more fitting way to head into the Christmas holiday in the United States than by digging into the finances and monetary flows of the Peopleβs Bank of China, then I just donβt want to know what it is. Contrary to maybe anyoneβs rational first impression that this is somehow insane, thereβs much we can tell about the state of the world, the whole world and its βdollarsβ, right from this one key data source.
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Start Long With The (long ago) End of Inflation
With the eurodollar futures curve slightly inverted, the implications of it are somewhat specific to the features of that particular market. And thereβs more than enough reason to reasonably suspect this development is more specifically deflationary money than more general economic concerns.
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TIC October: The Deflationary βDollarsβ Behind The Flat, Inverting Curves
Seems like ancient history given all thatβs happened since, but on October 13 Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen announced a planned deluge of cash management bills in the wake of the debt ceiling resolution (the first one). The next day, Chinaβs currency, CNY, broke free from its previous and suspiciously narrow range.
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One Shock Case For βIrrational Exuberanceβ Reaching A Quarter-Century
Have oil producers shot themselves in the foot, while at the same time stabbing the global economy in the back? Itβd be quite a feat if it turns out to be the case, one of those historical oddities that when anyone might honestly look back on it from the future still hung in disbelief. Letβs start by reviewing just the facts.
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Playing Dominoes
That was fast. Just yesterday I said watch out for when the oil curve flips from backwardation to contango. When it does, thatβs not a good sign. Generally speaking, it means something has changed with regard to future expectations, at least one of demand, supply, or also money/liquidity.
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