After they were downgraded in early August, US government bonds gained upward momentum and yields fell. Japan, which has danced the downgrade tango for years, is contemplating the next step, from AA- to A+, yet 10-year Japanese Government Bonds are yielding below 1%. Downgrades of sovereign bonds of developed countries make good headlines, but the impact on bond markets has been nil. With one exception: the Eurozone.
Federal Reserve
Cutting The Deficit: They Won’t Because They Don’t Have To
by Wolf Richter • • Comments Off on Cutting The Deficit: They Won’t Because They Don’t Have To
When The Truth About The US Economy Comes From China
by Wolf Richter • • Comments Off on When The Truth About The US Economy Comes From China
In his “enough’s-enough” speech in Hawaii, Obama castigated China for its currency peg, a perennial complaint. Congress too regularly hyperventilates about the yuan being “artificially undervalued.” If China just allowed the yuan to trade freely, they say, it would solve the U.S. economic quagmire. Cheap political posturing—and full of bitter ironies.
The Price of Hope in the Mayhem of Manufacturing
by Wolf Richter • • Comments Off on The Price of Hope in the Mayhem of Manufacturing
In what may be a precursor of a monumental shift, Toyota and Honda are planning to export U.S.-made vehicles to South Korea. Apparently, it’s now cheaper to produce cars here and ship them halfway across the world than it is to produce them in Japan. But to what banana-republic levels will the dollar and real wages have to sink before U.S. manufacturing is competitive with China?
Ruinous Symbiosis Between Congress And The Fed
by Wolf Richter • • Comments Off on Ruinous Symbiosis Between Congress And The Fed
The members of the congressional panel on deficit reduction are struggling to come up with something that will—I mean, let’s be realistic—get them reelected and fill their campaign funds. Even if they come up with a plan that will reduce the gargantuan budget deficits, Congress won’t follow through. Because it doesn’t have to, thanks to the Fed.
The Inexplicable American Consumer Strikes Again
by Wolf Richter • • Comments Off on The Inexplicable American Consumer Strikes Again
Consumer confidence indices have collapsed to levels not seen in years or even decades. Yet the toughest creature out there that no one has yet been able to beat down struck again. Consumer spending increased at an annual rate of 2.4% during the third quarter, though the mood has become outright morose since.
Just Say No, Germany … and Don’t Listen to Geithner
by Wolf Richter • • Comments Off on Just Say No, Germany … and Don’t Listen to Geithner
The German parliament has a historic opportunity to say no to the bankers: it gets to vote on expanding the European bailout fund to €1 trillion, though it had just been expanded to €440 billion. Since no one has any money, it will be in form of leverage, the very mechanism that has wreaked so much havoc already.
Berlusconi, waiting for money.
The GAO Audit of the Fed Doesn’t Call It ‘Corruption’….
by Wolf Richter • • Comments Off on The GAO Audit of the Fed Doesn’t Call It ‘Corruption’….
Tough Day For Our Calamity Economy
by Wolf Richter • • Comments Off on Tough Day For Our Calamity Economy
The Brutal Trade Deficit
by Wolf Richter • • Comments Off on The Brutal Trade Deficit
At $46 billion in August and a hair-raising $376 billion year to date, the trade deficit is a powerful descriptor of what’s wrong with the U.S. economy. By year end, it will amount to half a trillion. Economic activity gone overseas. The cause: an ancient and valid business principle that is now harming the overall economy.