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The Disturbing Reasons Why The Bank Of Japan Stunned Everyone With Negative Rates

The Disturbing Reasons Why The Bank Of Japan Stunned Everyone With Negative Rates

As we noted earlier, in a paradoxical U-turn, one which caught everyone by surprise as a result of Kuroda's own promise just one week ago not to engage in NIRP...

 

... and two months after the ECB's December 3 disappointing announcement led to a historic surge in the EUR, today countless macro hedge funds have been left reeling with huge losses once again, as many had recently turned bullish on the Yen...

... only to be eviscerated by the BOJ's negative rates announcement.

The Last Time Inflation Expectations Were This Low, Bernanke Unveiled QE2

The Last Time Inflation Expectations Were This Low, Bernanke Unveiled QE2

While University of Michigan confidence slipped modestly from December's print, the tumble in expectations (hope) from the preliminary print is perhaps more important as stocks dropped and volatility struck. However, more problematic for an inflation-hoping Federal Reserve is the drop in 12-month inflation expectations.

 

 

The last time inflation expectations were lower than this was September 2010.. when Bernanke hinted at QE2 at jackson Hole.

And The Biggest Contributor To U.S. Spending Growth in 2015 Was...

And The Biggest Contributor To U.S. Spending Growth in 2015 Was...

By now, not even CNBC's cheerleading permabulls can deny that the US is in a manufacturing recession: in fact, it is so bad that even the staunchest defenders of Keynesian dogma admit what we said in late 2014, namely that crashing oil is bad for the economy.

And yet, the "services" part of the US economy continues to hum right along, leading to such surprising outcomes as a stronger than expected print in Personal Consumption Expenditures. How can this be?

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