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US

Traders Lack Conviction in the Market

The prevailing trend across trading floors this morning is a rare lack of conviction.  One contact said, “It is silent here, everyone is just sitting staring at their screens, no one has any convictions”.   This loss in confidence could lead to oversized reactions—volatility—to breaking news; especially further negative developments in Europe.  The VIX Index, which […]

Pricing Pressure Building within the Depths of the PPI

Rising producer prices eventually translate into higher consumer prices as businesses are forced to pass on a portion if not all of the price increments to their customers.  So what you might be asking, this morning’s PPI indicated that producer prices fell -0.1% on a monthly basis. While this is true the PPI is broken […]

Why Central Bank Swaps Haven’t Put a Stop to LIBOR’s Climb

Defying most investors’ expectations, LIBOR’s climb has continued unabated, despite the reopening of the Fed’s Reciprocal Currency Swap lines.    According to the ECB’s records on May 11th seven bidders tapped USD9.2bn of the swaps at a rate of 1.22%, or nearly 100bps above the OIS funding rate.  Ray Stone of Stone & McCarthy Research Associates, […]

Credit Card Delinquencies Fall

Credit card delinquencies declined in April for the fourth straight month, indicating that consumers are gaining traction.  Diminishing delinquency and  default rates could eventually lead lenders to reduce strict lending standards; following significant tightening subsequent to the subprime crisis.  On this  note, more lenient lending standards could have wider implications for the U.S. economy, which […]

US Equities Outperforming The World

As of this morning, not only have US equities (as measured by the MSCI)outpaced their global counterparts, but on a year-to-date basis it’s the only index still showing gains, albeit somewhat modest.  Interestingly, as of this week the spread between the MSCI US and MSCI World index reached its highest spread of the year, mostly due to […]

Short-Term Inflation Expectations Drop Like a Rock

Rampant risk aversion, receding energy prices, and a USD rally have led to significant steepening in the short-end of the U.S. breakeven curve, with the potential for more to come ahead of next week’s CPI release (see chart).  So long as risks in Europe continue to escalate and CPI growth comes in at or below […]

Retail Sales Just Ain’t What They Used To Be:

On the surface the investors should be celebrating April’s higher than estimated retail sales growth, but a look behind the curtain reveals a slightly different picture.  The retail sales control group, which the government uses to calculate GDP, actually fell -0.2% during the month, its first decline since July 2009 (see chart).  The control group […]

Preparing for Retail

On the surface, a recovery in retail sales is not only a harbinger for stronger economic growth, but could prove to be the missing link for job creation (see chart).  Climbing out of the deepest recession since the Great Depression, consumption growth has been surprisingly tepid, at least partially due to companies’ lack of confidence […]

GDP Growth’s All a Bunch of Garbage…

I often analyze the volume of U.S. train car activity released by the Association of American Railroads, hoping to find some magical predictive power over equities, manufacturing, IP, etc…, but what I usually end up with is a mediocre coincident indicator.  While in some isolated incidents the index can exert considerable forecasting prowess, volatility and […]

Risk Aversion Not Just an Equities Story: Look for the Yen to Weaken

The AUD/JPY exchange rate, commonly used as a carry trade to take advantage of stark interest rate differentials between the two countries, is also a measure of investor risk.  For that reason it may surprise some of you to learn the cost of the Australian Dollar in terms of the Japanese Yen is tightly correlated […]