September 26, 2006

Economics and demography

Have Global Interest Rates Peaked?

by Edward Hugh

With the ECB adamant that it will continue to raise rates this would seem to be the most untimely of questions, but there are now signs that this may well be the case.
Firstly this in Bloomberg today:
Federal Reserve to Cut Rates in 2007, Corporate Bond Sales Show
Thinking about refinancing your mortgage in [...]

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November 24, 2005

Economics

Schyzophrenia Outbreak At The FT?

by Edward Hugh

I know you should never take what a central banker says at face value, but still. Today Christopher Swann in Washington tells us (in an article entitled: End in sight to the Fed’s rate-tightening cycle - and with no question mark):
For much of the past year and a half the Fed has been running almost [...]

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October 17, 2005

Economics

More On Exchange Rates and Policy Rate Differentials

by Edward Hugh

Morgan Stanley’s Stephen Len is obviously on the same page as I am about how the rising interest rate differential between Europe and the US is likely to drive short term currency movements:
Policy rate differentials are especially important now for the currency markets, and it pays to focus on central banks these days.
Reason 1. [...]

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October 11, 2005

Currencies

ECB Interest Rate Policy

by Edward Hugh

Brad Setser has a post today on Kate Moss, not provoked by her evidently economically intriguing modelling properties, but due to the Kate-Moss-thin credit-spreads which Bloomberg’s William Pesek refers to in this article. What really turns Pesek on it turns out isn’t Kate Moss at all but the possible existence of links between [...]

September 7, 2005

Economics and demography

Close Call

by Edward Hugh

The reference here isn’t to the actual hurricane (which was far from that if you were black, poor, and lived in downtown New Orleans) but to the economic ‘near miss’ I think we are watching, and to the difficult decision Alan Greenspan and his team will now have to take on 20 September next.
The blogs [...]

June 27, 2005

Economics and demography

Too Hot to Change?

by Doug Merrill

The Cunning Realist takes a look at limits:
Since the bursting of the technology bubble in 2000, there have been four distinct periods in which the Fed has flooded the system with an extraordinary amount of liquidity in an effort to boost the stock market:
1. Immediately after 9/11.
2. During the second half of 2002 in response [...]

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May 21, 2005

Currencies

The Euro And The Vote

by Edward Hugh

The euro reached its lowest level against the dollar in seven months last week dropping from a valueof $1.311 a month ago to $1.255 on Friday. This was the lowest level since last October. Undoubtedly there are a confluence of factors at work here: yesterday’s French growth numbers, longer term stagnant growth [...]

January 7, 2004

Currencies

Things That Can’t Go On Forever, Don’t

by Edward Hugh

Ok, the sun is shining nicely down here in Barcelona right now, so maybe this is a good moment to come out and provoke a storm. The euro: something gives, but what? Actually it is perhaps ironic that I have chosen today of all days to write this, since for once it seems the euro [...]

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