Bank of Japan
Gold Surges Amid Asian Sea Of Red, China Strengthens Yuan By Most In 4 Months
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2015 20:22 -0500Hong Kong's Hang Seng index is now down over 21% from the highs, having fallen over 9% in the last week, and Taiwan's TAIEX is down over 20% from April highs, joining Chinese stocks, both joining Chinese stocks in official bear markets. Japanese markets are down over 6% in the last few days (which Amari simply brushes off, blaming the global selloff stemming from China), a JGB trading volumes slump to a record low. Tensions in Korea are not helping. With all eyes on China's flash PMI (though why we are not sure since PBOC is already full liquidity-tard with CNY350bn this week alone), The PBOC fixed Yuan at 6.3864, up from yesterday's biggest strengthening in 3 months to 6.3915 (the biggest 2 day strengthening since April), and margin debt fell for the 3rd day. Gold is surging in the Asia session, near $1160.
Asset-Price Inflation Enters Its Dangerous Late Phase
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2015 15:30 -0500Asset price inflation, a disease whose source always lies in monetary disorder, is not a new affliction. It was virtually inevitable that the present wild experimentation by the Federal Reserve - joined by the Bank of Japan and ECB - would produce a severe outbreak. And indications from the markets are that the disease is in a late phase, though still short of the final deadly stage characterized by pervasive falls in asset markets, sometimes financial panic, and the onset of recession.
Central Banks Are Beginning to Lose Control
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 08/12/2015 08:50 -0500The significance of these developments cannot be overstated. Central Banks will be increasingly acting against one another going forward. There will more surprises and more volatility across the board. Eventually it will culminate in a Crash that will make 2008 look like a picnic.
This Is What Global Currency War Looks Like: A Complete History Of Recent FX Interventions
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/11/2015 09:54 -0500To help remind readers of what happens when the entire world engages in wholesale currency war, here is a complete list of all the recent FX interventions, courtesy of Stone McCarthy.
China Enters Currency War - Devalues Yuan By Most On Record
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/11/2015 07:32 -0500As we first warned in March, and as became abundantly clear over the weekend Beijing had no choice but to join the global currency wars, as the yuan's dollar peg will ultimately prove to be too painful going forward. And sure enough this evening the PBOC weakens the Yuan fix by the most on record.
Japan's Dire Message To Yellen: "Don't Raise Rates Soon"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2015 20:00 -0500There are so many parallels between the current period since 2007 in the U.S. (The Great Recession), the period since 1990 in Japan (Japan’s 2+ lost decades), and the period after 1929 in the US (The Great Depression) because they are all periods of a ‘balance-sheet recession’ (or similarly, ‘secular stagnation'; that it is next to impossible to dismiss the comparison. Using this, there is an important lesson for the Fed to consider now in weighing whether to raise rates.
Japan's Real Wages Just Plunged The Most In Six Years
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/04/2015 13:48 -0500Japan's all important real wages, even those including bonuses and special payments, once again failed to keep up with inflation, and in June crashed by a whopping 2.9% reflecting a 0.5% yoy increase in the CPI excluding imputed rent. As the chart below shows, there has now been 24 consecutive months without a single Y/Y monthly increase in real wages. What's worse is that when one adjusts the inflationary surge from the consumption tax hike last April, which has now been fully anniversaried and is no longer part of the base effect, this was the largest decline in Japan's real wages since December 2009, or the biggest monthly plunge in 6 years!
Shaping the Investment Climate and the Dollar Trade
Submitted by Marc To Market on 08/02/2015 08:59 -0500- Alan Greenspan
- Australia
- Australian Dollar
- Auto Sales
- Bank of England
- Bank of Japan
- BOE
- Bond
- Canadian Dollar
- Central Banks
- China
- Consumer Prices
- European Central Bank
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Greece
- Hong Kong
- Japan
- Mexico
- Monetary Policy
- Monetary Policy Statement
- New Zealand
- None
- Trade Balance
- Unemployment
- Volatility
- Yuan
A non-bombastic analysis of the events and data in the week ahead, with insulting anyone or resorting to conspiracy theories.
Was Kyle Bass Wrong About Japan?
Submitted by Capitalist Exploits on 07/29/2015 11:12 -0500Why I've come to thinking that Kyle Bass' short JGB premise may well be wrong
Russell Napier: What Happens When Markets Realize China Is A Forced Seller Of Treasuries
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/29/2015 09:30 -0500"How would US Treasury bulls in the private sector react if they knew in advance that the second largest owner of Treasuries, the PBOC, was a forced seller of Treasuries. Such compelled selling would be obvious before US markets opened each morning as downward pressure on the RMB exchange rate in Asia forced the PBOC to liquidate foreign currency assets to defend the fixed exchange rate. Would even Treasury bulls stand in the way of such a large and predictable liquidation? If they didn’t then the second phase of The Great Reset would come to pass and the decline of EM external deficits would force tighter monetary policy in both EM and DM."
Central Banks Ready To Panic - Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/26/2015 14:00 -0500Less than a decade after a housing/derivatives bubble nearly wiped out the global financial system, a new and much bigger commodities/derivatives bubble is threatening to finish the job. So... the central banks will panic. Again. Countries that retain some control over their monetary systems will see their interest rates fall to zero and beyond, while those that don’t will be thrown into some kind of new age hyperinflationary depression. Not 2008 all over again; this is something much stranger.
Deflation Is Winning - Beware!
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/26/2015 12:30 -0500- Australia
- Bank of Japan
- Bond
- Brazil
- Central Banks
- China
- Chris Martenson
- Corruption
- default
- France
- Greece
- Gross Domestic Product
- Hyperinflation
- Japan
- Market Manipulation
- Mexico
- Michael Pettis
- Muni Bonds
- Puerto Rico
- Real estate
- Reality
- Recession
- Shenzhen
- Sovereign Debt
- Swiss National Bank
- Volatility
- Yen
- Yuan
Deflation is back on the front burner and it's going to destroy all of the careful central planning and related market manipulation of the past 6 years. Clear signs from the periphery indicate that a destructive deflationary pulse has been unleashed. After years of suppression, the forces of reality are threatening to overwhelm our managed global ""markets"'. And it's about damn time.
Jim Grant: Financial Prices Should Be Discovered, Not Administered
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/25/2015 11:30 -0500"The modern financial animal is wont to assume that he or she lives in an age of science. The truth is we live in an age of pseudoscience. Far from dealing in science, central bankers, and, to a degree, investment bankers and security analysts, employ magical thinking... For an individual to fix Libor is a crime. For a central bank to suppress European bond yields is an act of financial statesmanship..."
Have Central Banks Brought Us Back to 2008… or 1929?
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 07/18/2015 11:34 -0500The last time these criteria were met... stocks plunged over 90% over the next 24 months.
Japan's Economic Disaster: Real Wages Lowest Since 1990, Record Numbers Describe "Hard" Living Conditions
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/15/2015 19:00 -0500With so much attention rightly focused on China at the moment, people aren’t paying enough attention to the budding economic calamity unfolding in Japan. While “Abenomics” has succeeded in boosting the stock market and food prices, it has utterly failed to raise wages. In fact, wages adjusted for inflation have plunged to the lowest since 1990. As such, a record number of households now describe their living conditions as “somewhat hard” or “very hard.”





