Federal Reserve
Global Stocks, EM FX Extend Losses Despite China Saying "No Collapse Is Nigh"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/20/2015 20:22 -0500US equity futures have retraced the late-day ramp from Friday with Dow down around 65pts. Asia is opening weaker (NKY -900 from Thursday highs) with EM FX appearing not to get the "but we didn't hike" message from The Fed with MYR the worst hit for now (after a few days of strength). EM outflows accelerated according to Morgan Stanley, down 6% AUM in 12 weeks. PBOC devalued the Yuan fix by 0.11% (the most in 2 weeks). While Fed uncertainty and fears about China have caused global derisking, PBOC chief Fan says "the economy is stable," and China's Beige Book suggests 'everything is awesome', as the survey summarizes, "perceptions of China may be more thoroughly divorced from facts on the ground than at any time in our nearly five years of surveying the economy." If that's the case, then why is Janet in panic mode?
Game Over
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/20/2015 18:45 -0500The game is over. The trend has changed. And the Fed knows it. The question is: What will it do about it? Roll-over or fight? But will it matter much if it fights? Janet Yellen clearly lost the crowd this week as “accommodative” was met with a resounding SELL as confidence has been shaken. Her job is now to win back confidence. Whether she can or not is now largely determined how the binary set-up we face here plays out. Bottom line: Bulls need a 1998 like repeat to save this year. How did the Fed manage the big correction in the Fall of 1998: It cut rates of course...Well, good luck with that this year.
Fed To Main Street: Screw You - Wall Street Matters More
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/20/2015 11:00 -0500One can’t help being left slack-jawed witnessing that the Fed has just publicly inserted itself into geopolitics via its monetary policy as de facto first responder/savior of all economies. Even if it puts U.S. savers, retirees, along with its economy in the back seat.
Nine Items on My Radar Screen: Are They on Yours?
Submitted by Marc To Market on 09/20/2015 09:01 -0500- Australia
- Bank of England
- BOE
- Bond
- Budget Deficit
- Canadian Dollar
- Central Banks
- China
- Creditors
- Federal Reserve
- France
- Germany
- Greece
- headlines
- Hungary
- Investment Grade
- Israel
- Italy
- Japan
- Market Conditions
- Mexico
- Monetary Policy
- New Zealand
- Newspaper
- Portugal
- ratings
- recovery
- Switzerland
- Testimony
- Turkey
- Volatility
- Yen
- Yuan
Non-bombasitc overview of the investment climate. No, the sky is not falling. This is not the end of days.
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Central Banks Have Shot Their Wad & The Market Deck Has Been Reshuffled
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/19/2015 18:15 -0500Most just scoff at the notion that there has been a historic global Bubble, let alone that this Bubble has over recent months begun to burst. Talk of an EM and global crisis is viewed as wackoism. Except that the Federal Reserve clearly sees something pernicious in the world that requires shelving, after seven years, even the cutest little baby step move in the direction of policy normalization. The Fed and global central banks responded to the 2008 crisis with unprecedented measures. When the reflationary effects of these policies began to wane, the unfolding 2012 global crisis spurred desperate concerted do “whatever it takes” monetary stimulus. This phase has now largely run its course, and there is at this point little clarity as to what global central bankers might try next.
Peter Schiff Explains The "External Threat" Justifying The Fed's Tyrannical Policies
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/19/2015 13:45 -0500Every dictator knows that a continuous state of emergency is the best means to justify tyrannical policies. The trick is to keep the fictitious emergency from breeding so much paranoia that routine activities come to a halt. Many have discovered that its best to make the threat external, intangible and ultimately, unverifiable. In Orwell's 1984 the preferred mantra was "We've always been at war with Eurasia," even though everyone knew it wasn't true. In its rate decision this week the Federal Reserve, adopted a similar approach and conjured up an external threat to maintain a policy that is becoming increasingly absurd.
Janet Yellen's "Fedspeak" Translated
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/19/2015 12:15 -0500For those of you who don’t want to take the time reading through the ponderous 7000-word transcript of yesterday’s FOMC press conference, we bring you the shorter Janet Yellen, translated from Fedspeak into plain English. Enjoy!
The Fed is Now Cornered
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 09/19/2015 09:26 -0500The Fed is truly cornered. If it fails to hike rates it will have no ammo for when the next crisis hits the US. But it if hikes rates now while the economy is so weak (more on this in a moment), it’s likely to kick off or deepen a recession.
Gold and Silver Bullion Demand Very Robust - Delays and Premiums Rising
Submitted by GoldCore on 09/19/2015 07:56 -0500The incredibly strong demand for physical precious metals around the world continues to be obscured by institutional selling of futures contracts on the COMEX. The paper or electronic market continues to dominate the spot price for now. But rising premiums and delays for popular bullion products suggests that proper price discovery reflecting real world supply and demand may be at hand.
Palo Alto Outdoes Itself
Submitted by Tim Knight from Slope of Hope on 09/18/2015 21:51 -0500She's a block away from the ghost of Steve Jobs. It's a lovely neighbhorhood, to be sure. But...........thirty million dollars???
Deep State America
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/18/2015 21:25 -0500Ordinary Americans frequently ask why politicians and government officials appear to be so obtuse, rarely recognizing what is actually occurring in the country. That is partly due to the fact that the political class lives in a bubble of its own creation, but it might also be because many of America’s leaders actually accept that there is an unelected, unappointed, and unaccountable presence within the system that actually manages what is taking place behind the scenes. That would be the American deep state. America’s deep state is completely corrupt: it exists to sell out the public interest, and includes both major political parties as well as government officials.
Yellen's "New" Mandate - Why We Are All Fed-Watchers Now
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/18/2015 20:15 -0500Perception is everything in contemporary economics and the Fed is the center of perception; the medium has become the message. The truth is more this: the Fed no longer reacts to the waxing and waning of animal spirit-led demand. In the current monetary regime it exists to create and maintain animal spirits with a secular policy centered on ever-expanding credit, but it is very aware that admitting it’s centrality would defeat its purpose.
Austrian Economics, Monetary Freedom, & America's Economic Roller-Coaster
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/18/2015 19:05 -0500- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Capital Formation
- Census Bureau
- Central Banks
- Excess Reserves
- Fannie Mae
- Federal Reserve
- Freddie Mac
- Great Depression
- Henry Paulson
- Housing Market
- Housing Prices
- John Maynard Keynes
- Keynesian economics
- Ludwig von Mises
- Maynard Keynes
- Milton Friedman
- Monetary Base
- Monetary Policy
- Mortgage Loans
- Nationalism
- None
- Quantitative Easing
- Real Interest Rates
- Recession
- recovery
- Unemployment
- Washington D.C.
It is time for a radical denationalization of money, a privatization of the monetary and banking system through a separation of government from money and all forms of financial intermediation. That is the pathway to ending the cycles of booms and busts, and creating the market-based institutional framework for sustainable economic growth and betterment. It is time for monetary freedom to replace the out-of-date belief in government monetary central planning.
Fed Opens Negative Interest Rate Pandora's Box: What Happens Next
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/18/2015 17:01 -0500"As interest rates go more negative, market participants will have increasing incentives to make payments quickly and to receive payments in forms that can be collected slowly. This is exactly the opposite of what happened when short-term interest rates skyrocketed in the late 1970s: people then wanted to delay making payments as long as possible and to collect payments as quickly as possible.... if interest rates go negative, we may see an epochal outburst of socially unproductive—even if individually beneficial—financial innovation."
The Fed Is Trapped: The Naked Emperor's New "Reaction Function"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/18/2015 16:09 -0500On Thursday, the Fed made it clear that its reaction function has changed. "Data dependency" is gone (or at least relegated to the backburner in times of global turmoil), and international and financial market developments are now officially guiding the FOMC's (tentative) hand. This epochal shift has left market participants asking one very simple question: "Ok, now what?"






