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SNB & CHF

What’s Your Line in the Sand? The $25 Burger?

The gag reflex kicks in at some point and we walk away because it is no longer worth the price. Everyone has a line in the sand when it comes to inflated prices they refuse to pay. For one Walmart shopper I observed, it was a carton of eggs for close to $10. She announced her line in the sand verbally, with great force and sincerity. What’s your line in the sand, the point at which you simply refuse to pay the asking price? Is it the $25 burger? Or is it the $50 for...

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Quarterly Bulletin Q4/2022

Monetary policy report Report for the attention of the Governing Board of the Swiss National Bank for its quarterly assessment of December 2022 The report describes economic and monetary developments in Switzerland and explains the inflation forecast. It shows how the SNB views the economic situation and the implications for monetary policy it draws from this assessment. The first section (‘Monetary policy decision of 15 December 2022’) is an excerpt from the press...

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Here comes the deflation. CPIs are out.

All along, markets told you it was never inflation therefore it was always going to be transitory. As curves shifted toward their current extremes, confidence in that interpretation and outcome also grew extreme. Now more and more data lines up with all of it, and against the Fed. Surveys, inflation expectations, CPIs and PPIs. All of it declaring with great certainty "inflation" is over. Eurodollar University's Money & Macro Analysis Twitter:...

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Dr. Keith Weiner – Zugzwang: Die Fed ist zum Handeln gezwungen

Keith Weiner, PhD, ist Wirtschaftswissenschaftler und eine führende Autorität auf dem Gebiet von Gold, Geld und Kredit. Er ist der Präsident des Gold Standard Institute USA. Er bloggt über Gold und den Dollar, und seine Artikel erscheinen auf Forbes, Zero Hedge, Kitco und anderen führenden Websites. Als führende Autorität und Verfechter einer rationalen Geldpolitik ist er im Finanzfernsehen, in der Peter Schiff Show und als Redner auf Konferenzen in aller...

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Student Debt: It Is and Has Been a Personal Choice

The Supreme Court of the United States will hear plaintiff and defendant oral arguments for Biden v. Nebraska in February 2023. That case will determine whether the Biden administration has the constitutional authority to forgive student loan debt and thereby make taxpayers responsible for the debts that students have incurred. This past year President Biden announced that his administration would forgive federal student loans. According to the Congressional Budget...

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Bank of Japan ‘stunned’ the markets w/major shakeup to YCC. What it all means.

Let the clown-show roll on. Bank of Japan votes to widen the trading band for yield curve "control" over the JGB 10s. I'll go through what YCC is, where it came from, what's going on with it now, most importantly what it means for all of us unsure about 2022 heading into 2023. Eurodollar University's Money & Macro Analysis Twitter: https://twitter.com/JeffSnider_AIP https://www.eurodollar.university https://www.marketsinsiderpro.com https://www.PortfolioShield.net...

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Secession: Why the Regime Tolerates Self-Determination for Foreigners, but Not for Americans

Opponents of secession in the United States often choose from several reasons as to why no member state of the United States should be allowed to separate from the rest of the confederation. Some antisecessionists say it’s bad for national security reasons. Others oppose secession for nationalistic reasons, declaring that “we”—whoever that is—shouldn’t “give up on America.” Antisecessionists Believe Self-Determination Leads to “Bad” Laws One of the most popular...

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Companies invest more money in R&D in Switzerland

Syngenta employees carry out research on corn in Stein, canton Aargau, in November 2021. © Keystone / Gaetan Bally Firms invested CHF16.8 billion ($18 billion) in research and development (R&D) activities in Switzerland last year, a 4% increase compared to 2019. A survey carried out by the Federal Statistical Office (FSO) and the Swiss Business Federation economiesuisse said the pharmaceutical sector was the biggest R&D investor (CHF6.2 billion, or 37% of the...

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Japan Surprises

The Bank of Japan surprised everyone may lifting the 10-year yield curve cap to 0.50% from 0.25%.The BOJ also said it would increase its bond purchases to JPY9 trillion (~$68 bln) a month compared to the current JPY7.3 trillion.   BOJ Kuroda, whose term ends next April, insisted that the easy monetary policy stance will continue.   The surprise decision sent ripples across the capital markets.  Japanese stocks slumped, with the Nikkei falling about 2.5%.  Global...

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Weekly Market Pulse: Happy Holidays

We received a host of economics reports this past week; some good, others not so much. The week started with the Consumer Price Index report coming in better than expected at an increase of just 0.1% from the previous month (7.1% from a year ago), compared with respective estimates of 0.3% and 7.3%. This is great news (and the market responded in kind), as inflation continues to moderate not only here but also in Europe. US import and export prices were also both...

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