Category Archives: Currencies

Traders Betting on Euro Plunge

This Telegraph article attributes the bearish outlook for the euro to deteriorating fundamentals and expected rate cuts. As the yen attests, a sharp fall in economic activity and prospects can lead traders to change their views, sometimes abruptly. And the euro has always had a whiff of doubt about it, with less than the full […]

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Will Eastern Europe Trigger a Financial Meltdown?

We’ve commented from time to time that a possible financial flashpoint is countries that got themselves in the same fix as Iceland , of having a banking sector engaged in the generally risky practices that were standard form recently, and was outsized relative to the economy (Willem Buiter also points out that that precarious situation […]

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Bank Stress Testing: Less Than Meets the Eye

We are supposed to be impressed with the speed and scale of government action on the bank front. As reported in the New York Times: Nearly 100 federal banking regulators descended on Citigroup in New York on Wednesday morning. Dozens more fanned out through Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase and other big banks across the […]

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Chinese Bank Advisor Demands Guarantees on Its Treasury Bond Holdings

On the one hand, the demand by China that the US somehow guarantee its $682 billion in Treasury holding reads like a political and negotiating strategem rolled into one. It reenforces the idea that the economic crisis is the solely the fault of the corrupt, profligate West and it constitutes a demand that the US […]

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Willem Buiter: Mismanagement by the Officialdom Can Produce a Depression

To be fair, Willem Buiter’s latest post strives for a bit of gallows humor via its title, “YES WE CAN!! have a global depression if we really continue to work at it…,” before getting down to serious business, namely, that the powers that be risk missing the opportunity to salvage the global economy. What makes […]

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China Moves to Shorter Maturity Treasuries Out of Bond Bubble Worries

The 30 year Treasury bond has fallen from roughly 140 to its current level of 125-ish, so absent an intensification of deflation worries, one might surmise that at least some of the air has come out of the Treasury bond bubble. One might also take the view that the Chinese played this one astutely (or […]

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Willem Buiter Argues Against Eurozone Breakup Worries

Predicting the demise, or at least the marginalization of the euro is a popular pastime for some writers (Ambrose Evans-Pritchard of the Telegraph, one of our favorite deflationistas, engages in occasional euro-bashing). Similarly, quite a few investors I know think the euro has no hope of serving as a reserve currency. particularly because some eurozone […]

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Chinese Central Bank to Test Program to Settle Trade in Yuan Rather Than Dollars

While it would be easy to dismiss this move by the People’s Bank of China to inch away from dollar based invoicing, the fact is that the use of other currencies for denominating trade transactions has been on the rise. We cited this Globe and Mail story back in February: The chief executive of jewellery […]

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