Doug Noland | TalkMarkets | Page 9
Professional Bear
Contributor's Links: Credit Bubble Bulletin
I just wrapped up 25 years (persevering) as a “professional bear”. My lucky break came in late-1989, when I was hired by Gordon Ringoen to be the trader for his short-biased hedge fund in San Francisco. Working as a short-side trader, analyst and portfolio manager during the great ...more

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Weekly Commentary: No One Knows How Monetary Policy Works
In the cheap-money era, now into its second decade in most of the developed world (and third in Japan), there’s been plenty of borrowing. But it’s been governments doing it.
Weekly Commentary: Global Markets’ Plumbing Problem
The Dow was up 747 points in Friday trading (more than erasing Thursday’s 660-point drubbing) on the back of a stellar jobs report and market-soothing comments from Fed Chairman “Jay” Powell.
Weekly Commentary: Thoughts On Liquidity
My thinking on contemporary “money” has been adapted from a much earlier focus on money’s “preciousness.”
Weekly Commentary: The Perils Of Inflationism
When the European Central Bank switches off its money-printing press at the turn of this year and stops buying fresh assets, it will mark the end of a decade-long global experiment in how to stave off economic meltdowns.
Weekly Commentary: Framework For Monitoring Financial Stability
Upon the public release of Fed Chairman Jerome Powell's Wednesday speech equities responded to the Chairman's seeming dovish transformation with jubilation (and quite a short squeeze).
Weekly Commentary: Just The Facts - Nov. 25, 2018
Covering the most important topics from this past week in this thorough review and commentary.
Weekly Commentary: Canary In The Credit Market's Coal Mine
When markets are booming and cheap Credit remains readily available, Wall Street is content to overlook operating cash flow and balance sheet/capital structure issues.
Weekly Commentary: Back To Fundamentals
The post-election bullish battle cry was a resolute "back to fundamentals!" With the market surging, analysts were proclaiming "reduced uncertainty" and "the best possible outcome for the markets."
Weekly Commentary: "Whatever They Want" Coming Home To Roost
Covering the most important topics from this past week in this thorough review and commentary.
Weekly Commentary: Rude Awakening Coming
There's little satisfaction writing the CBB after a big down week in the markets. I find myself especially melancholy at the end of this week. There's a Rude Awakening Coming - perhaps it's finally starting to unfold.
Weekly Commentary: Contemporary Finance's Defect
The bottom line is the Fed waited much too long to begin normalizing monetary policy. Moreover, they pre-committed to an extremely gradual path of rates increases.
New Age Mandate
As Bubble risks escalate, why would sovereign yields around the globe not discount the high probability that central banks will make good on their New Mandate - i.e. respond to faltering Bubbles with aggressive new QE programs?
The VIX And The Scheme
Why is the VIX – and other market “insurance” – so extraordinarily cheap? Taking a global Bubble perspective, the foundation of cheap “insurance” rests upon the perception of a relatively stable global Credit backdrop.
Liquidity Supernova And The Big Ugly Flaw
There’s no cure for major asset Bubbles other than unwinds. Once asset inflation becomes the prevailing inflationary manifestation it becomes impossible to inflate away the problem.
“Risk Off” Making Some Headway
Global “Risk Off” has been Making Some Headway. Last week saw ten-year Treasury yields drop 15 bps to 2.23%, the low since the week following the election. German bund yields declined another four bps to a 2017 low 19 bps.
Just The Facts, April 10
Just the facts about last week's global market activity.
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