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Category Archives: Credit
Chart of the Day: Dr. Copper Falls Through the Ice
Dr. Copper broke through its support at 4.10 and is below 4.00 for the first time since early December. Lots of flakes in this chart as head and shoulder patterns are ubiquitous. Copper is a very crowded trade and some … Continue reading
Posted in Black Swan Watch, China, Commodities, Credit, Currency, Dollar, Monetary Policy
Tagged China, Commodities, Copper
3 Comments
Charts of the Day: Asian Credit Bubble?
Great chart from Deustche Bank of Asian home prices indexed to Jan’07. It’s becoming increasingly clear, at least to us, that a big part of Asia is in massive credit/asset bubble and as monetary tightening plays out their day of … Continue reading
Posted in Black Swan Watch, Bonds, China, Commodities, Credit, Crude Oil, Currency
Tagged Asian Home Prices, Credit Bubble
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10 Questions for Chairman Bernanke
If we were attending the Fed’s historic press conference tomorrow, here are the ten questions we would ask Chairman Bernanke: 1) Do you think the new monetary policy tool of the Federal Reserve of paying interest on reserves (IOR) is … Continue reading
Posted in Budget Deficit, Commodities, Credit, Crude Oil, Currency, Food Prices, Gold, Monetary Policy, Policy
Tagged Chairman Bernanke, Fed Press Conference, FOMC, Monetary Policy
3 Comments
Chart of the Day: Fed Ownership of the Yield Curve
We’ve updated our chart illustrating the Fed ownership of the U.S. yield curve. We’ve also included the percentage of total maturities the Fed owns in each year from the April 2011 data and December 2010 data. Most of POMO buying … Continue reading
Posted in Bonds, Budget Deficit, Chart of the Day, Commodities, Credit, Sovereign Debt, Sovereign Risk
Tagged Federal Reserve, Inflation, POMO, Treasury Bonds, Yield Curve
1 Comment
U.S. Macro in Two Simple Charts
To understand the U.S. economy go no further than the following two charts. In 2009 and 2010, public sector borrowing was more than 100 percent of total net domestic credit flows. Federal government borrowing was 93 percent of these flows. … Continue reading
Trichet Says Bond “Haircuts” Would Reward Short Sellers
A few week ago ECB President, Jean Claude Trichet, torched the short sellers of the Euro and he is now warning Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) that demanding “haircuts” from bondholders in Greece and Ireland would reward the short … Continue reading
Posted in Credit, Economics, Euro, Monetary Policy, PIIGS, Sovereign Debt, Sovereign Risk
Tagged Euopean Sovereign Debt Crisis, Euro, Trichet
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Monetarism Redefined: Crude, Fine Wine & Gold
“Inflation is Always and Everywhere a Monetary Phenomenon” – Milton Freidman Monetarism as a theory, which states that the variation in the money supply has major influences on national output in the short run and the price level over longer … Continue reading
Posted in Black Swan Watch, Bonds, BRICs, Budget Deficit, Charts, China, Commodities, Credit, Crude Oil, Currency, Economics, Monetary Policy
Tagged Energy Prices, Food Prices, Global Monetary Base, Inflaton
3 Comments
JP Morgan’s Revenues: Tables & Charts
Let’s start with the caveat we’re not stock analysts and the sheer size of JP Morgan’s balance sheet and the dynamic use of reserves makes it difficult to get a true picture of what’s really going on. But it’s tough … Continue reading
Risk 2011: Fate of Commodities in China’s Hands
We begin our analysis with a little perspective on how we view the crisis. The pre-crisis global aggregate demand was primarily driven by an over leveraged U.S. consumer, who was spending “fake wealth” created by a housing bubble financed by … Continue reading
Posted in Black Swan Watch, China, Commodities, Credit, Crude Oil, Equities, Monetary Policy, Sovereign Risk
Tagged China, Hang seng, Hard Landing, Shanghai, Soft Landing
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Fed Ownership of the U.S Treasury Curve
Here’s an interesting chart we threw together showing the Fed’s ownership of Treasury securities maturing in each year on the curve. There are no bonds maturing in 2032-35 due to the temporary discontinuance of the 30-year earlier in the millennium, … Continue reading
Posted in Black Swan Watch, Bonds, Budget Deficit, Credit, Economics, Fiscal Policy, Monetary Policy, Policy, Politics, Sovereign Debt, Sovereign Risk
Tagged Fiscal Policy, Interest rates, Monetary Policy, POMO, QE2
9 Comments
