Econ70
The Friday File: According to a Washington University professor, if one were to assume Emperor Palpatine was fiscally conservative, destroying the second Death Star and with it the Galactic government, the Rebels probably caused bond defaults of $500 quintillion. Absent…
Read MoreChina’s wish to peg the yuan to a basket of currencies and not just the dollar is an attempt to weaken its currency, but the strengthening dollar makes the task harder. To keep the existing peg, China’s central bank (PBoC)…
Read MoreEarlier today, the Fed raised the fed funds rate by 0.25%, the first rate rise in almost a decade and seven years to the day since rates first hit zero. The S&P 500 jumped almost 1.5% and long bonds barely…
Read MoreWhile the Chinese economy is cooling, Chinese buyers are pouring into US real estate. In 2015, their $30 billion in purchases will equal all purchases by Canadians, Indians, Mexicans, and the British, the next four most popular nationalities. Chinese buyers…
Read MoreGiven that consumer spending accounts for two-thirds of GDP and retail sales account for one-third of that, the 0.2% rise in November retail sales was superficially disappointing. But Y-o-Y inflation is zero! Were inflation just 2.3%, retail sales growth would…
Read MoreThe Friday File: This Monday, Governor Terry Branstad of Iowa will become the longest serving governor in US history at 7,640 days, almost 21 years, and will surpass the long held record of Vice President and Revolutionary War General George…
Read MoreIt’s remarkable that several Republican presidential candidates advocate a return to the gold standard. Doing so would outsource our money supply growth and thus monetary policy to the world’s largest gold producers including China, Russia, Peru and South Africa. And…
Read MoreWith a Fed rate hike a forgone conclusion, the next three issues of concern are: how gradually will the Fed raise rates, when does the Fed stop reinvesting interest and principal from their $4 trillion portfolio of Treasuries and agency…
Read MoreSince bailing out Fannie and Freddie to the tune of $188 billion, the Treasury has taken all their profit and is slowly taking all their capital. By 2018, F&F will have none. Unfortunately, F&F are becoming less profitable as they…
Read MoreFriday’s labor numbers were excellent! 211,000 net new jobs, upward revisions totaling 35,000 for September and October, an increase in the labor force participation rate from 62.4% to 62.5%, and decent year-over-year wage growth of 2.3%. Better yet, construction added…
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