Australia, New Zealand, UK markets closed for Boxing Day. After rallying last week, oil prices are off 2%, base and precious metals lower. European core and peripheral bond markets are highs, with yields slipping mostly 2-3 bp. No end to the political uncertainty in Spain, but Spanish 10-year bonds are matching regional performance. Equities have a heavier bias. Asian shares were mixed. The Nikkei rose 0.6% while the Shanghai Composite fell 2.6%. Reports suggest that the...
Read More »Supply and Demand Report 27 Dec, 2015
The prices of the metals rose a bit this quiet, holiday week. Merry Christmas! Speaking of Christmas, Keith’s brother who is an amateur woodworker of growing skill, gave him this present on Friday. Regular readers may recognize the design as our logo. Each “M” is made of a single piece of wood. They are stained or painted in the correct colors. The minute hand is silver and the hour hand is gold (paint, alas!) It now occupies a prominent place in the office. It is worth taking this time...
Read More »Good Holiday Reads
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Read More »Hump Day Update
The thinness of the order-driven capital markets is making price action that seems more inexplicable than usual. The US dollar is mixed. It has recouped all the ground it lows against the euro yesterday, as the single currency briefly dipped below $1.09 in the North American morning. It was unable to build on yesterday's gains that had carried it up to almost $1.0950. Despite some fraying, the $1.08-$1.10 trading range still seems intact. Sterling which had been sold to eight-month...
Read More »Tuesday’s Highlights
1. China's Central Economic Work Conference is responsible for setting the annual GDP target. Although it was not formally announced, President Xi previously indicated that the goal for the economy to expand by around 6.5% a year through 2020. More telling than the GDP target is the intentions expressed in the new slogan: flexible monetary policy, forceful fiscal policy. For Chinese officials, these are not ends in themselves but means to another end. In this case, the goal is to...
Read More »What Effect Interest Rates
Soggy Dollars There’s this article, saying rising rates are good for gold. It repeats two old errors: gold goes up, and things that cause it (e.g. a collapsing paper currency) are “good”. We have recently been emphasizing that interest does not correlate well with the price of gold. If you want to speculate on the gold price, rising rates may not be a good trading signal. Pure Gold Please forgive us once, the sin of linking an article by our own Keith Weiner. Keith argues that Yellen is...
Read More »A Few Takeaways
1. The election in Spain did not lift the uncertainty but re-redoubled it. Given the outcome, it is difficult envision a majority government. Purely looking at the numbers, a coalition between the Popular Party and the Socialists is simplest solution. It is like Pasok and the New Democracy in Greece and the Christian and Social Democrats in Germany. While such grand coalitions maybe political expedient, it sends a powerful signal that there is not a significant difference between the...
Read More »Measuring Inflation
(co-authored with my colleague Sam Waters) Inflation or indeed its opposite has driven monetary policy among the largest high income economies. With nominal rates thought to be bounded by zero, the US, UK, and Japan engaged in operations to increase the size of the central bank’s balance sheets as an unorthodox channel of easing monetary conditions. European central banks demonstrated interest rates can fall below zero. Countries have adopted different measures of consumer inflation. ...
Read More »Janet Yellen Lit the Fuse Report 20 Dec, 2015
The prices of the metals were sagging. Silver was trading around $13.80. On Wednesday, Janet “Good News” Yellen said the magic words. The Federal Reserve hiked the federal funds rate by 25 basis points. The price of silver was surging in anticipation of the news (we assume). Within an hour or so of the announcement, it had spiked to $14.32, up 3.8% in a few hours. Despite our note on 8 November, this week we have seen more than one article claiming that a rising interest rate is good for...
Read More »Four Drivers of the Investment Climate in 2016
The broad interpretative framework we developed since late 2014, one that centers the dy-synchronization of the major economies, will retain its usefulness into the New Year and beyond. The first phase of divergence was characterized by the Federal Reserve standing pat after winding down their open-ended asset purchase operations (QE3+) while many central banks from high income countries, including the eurozone, Japan, China, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Sweden, and Norway eased...
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