NO ONE WINS THIS RACE
Jeff Snider Jeff Snider

NO ONE WINS THIS RACE

Summary: We weren’t supposed to see ultra-low interest rates again. The way it was told, they were a product of a bygone era left behind after the skillful handling of the pandemic. Not enough people appreciate just how close much of the world already is to historically low market and policy rates ALREADY. Even previously reluctant central bankers are heading fast in that direction. Next week, Switzerland is going to be debating a return to a zero interest rate. NEXT WEEK. Of the rest of the major central banks, they aren’t all that far behind and most of them are fast heading in that direction.

Read More
ANOTHER MEASURE OF ALTITUDE
Jeff Snider Jeff Snider

ANOTHER MEASURE OF ALTITUDE

Summary: GDPNow abruptly turned deeply negative at the end of last month. It was blamed on Swiss gold. While that part explains the depth of the negative, it doesn’t account for the full loss of GDP altitude. If anything, that loss is showing up in a wide variety of recession calls (rising probabilities) and downgraded growth expectations. Those downgrades seem relatively tame, from historical perspective if they hold true we will have experienced a full, traditional recession. There is no ambiguity in the data. Instead, this the GDP version of the Beveridge Curve - stall speed.

Read More
THE KING SPEECH
Jeff Snider Jeff Snider

THE KING SPEECH

Summary: The past is prologue? There are a lot of similarities between now and 2024. In light of what Korea and Japan just reported, it’s worth going back to revisit six years ago, featuring one of the few honest (former) official reflections from that period. A reflection whose sentiment (pun very much intended) still stands to this day. In fact, that’s what all the incoming data keeps showing. Even before the latest “trade wars”, we’re seeing the same results from the last one.

Read More
SIDEWAYS TO THE 2s
Jeff Snider Jeff Snider

SIDEWAYS TO THE 2s

Summary: A global deluge of GDP reports. Not surprisingly, they showed a lot more sideways and not just across Europe. Starting with the Europeans, though, GDP misses and more than a few minuses show that nothing has changed either in the economy or most officials’ interpretations of it. More importantly, it isn’t solely Europe where we see sideways. Most of all, this is right where the 2s had had the world going after central bankers won the bank crisis battle then unknowingly lost the money and macro war.

Read More
THEY’RE ALL HEDGING NOW
Jeff Snider Jeff Snider

THEY’RE ALL HEDGING NOW

Summary: A busy day in Oceana. RBA cut rates for the first time since 2020, making the last of the rate cutting cycles to kick off - or, the tail end of the rate cut cycle, singular. Globally synchronized is apparent in what RBA did as much as next door in New Zealand where far clearer yet similar degradation convinced the central bank there to cut by another fifty. There is as much political pressure in all places driving the sudden hedging on rates from central bankers everywhere - including, now, Australia.

Read More
MR. BULLARD WOULD LIKE A CURVE WORD
Jeff Snider Jeff Snider

MR. BULLARD WOULD LIKE A CURVE WORD

Summary: More volatility in markets, including stocks. Bond yields were down sharply, before turned around on tariff news. Target added to the negatives with several warnings, the first of which further verified the growing “growth scare.” With market interest rates already down sharply, attention turns to the short end. Forward rate markets are beginning to creep toward a sooner Fed rate cut trigger, with one key contract crossing its threshold. The history of the Fed with the yield curve sets out the dynamic, one that has been kept from the public.

Read More
QUITE CERTAIN ABOUT THIS UNCERTAINTY
Jeff Snider Jeff Snider

QUITE CERTAIN ABOUT THIS UNCERTAINTY

Summary: Practically everyone keeps blaming “uncertainty” for all the “unexpected” results showing up in more and more places. The thing is, the data is getting more certain not less. February’s labor data was conclusive across all the key aspects. Even the Establishment Survey contributed to settling the short run question in the economy, and then added much to the more important interpretation of the jobs market’s overall condition. There is no wiggle room here any longer.

Read More