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The Fed's Academic-Based Theories Are Creating a BRUTAL Economic Reality

One of the most frustrating aspects of today’s financial system is the fact that the Fed is being lead by lifelong academics with no real world banking or business experience.

 

Consider the cases of Ben Bernanke and Janet Yellen.

 

Neither of these individuals has ever created a job based on generating sales of any kind. Neither of them has ever had to make payroll. Neither of them has ever run a business. What are economic realities for business owners (e.g. operating costs, capital and profits) are just abstract concepts for Bernanke and Yellen.

 

Dallas Fed Survey Crashes To June 2009 Lows, Warns "It Is Getting Ugly"

Dallas Fed Survey Crashes To June 2009 Lows, Warns "It Is Getting Ugly"

After a Q1 collapse, the Dallas Fed Manufacturing Outlook managed a bounce for a few months (though never got back above zero). It appears, Dallas Fed's aptly-named 'Dick' Fischer was entirely wrong when he progonosticated that "on net, low oil prices are good for Texas." December's Dallas Fed print crashed to -20.1 (from -4.9) massively missing expectations of -7.0 and back at the lows not seen since June 2009.

 

Dallas Fed is in contraction for the 12th month in a row...

 

Oil May Drop Under $20 In The Short-Term, But What Is Its Price Floor?

In practice, there is no bottom to how low oil prices can drop: as Canada's Bank of Montreal calculated over the weekend, as a result of an unsustainable supply-demand balance "something has to give", and for that to happen oil may drop to $25, $20 or even $15, as some aggressive put buyers are speculating. This is what the Canadian bank said:

We believe that the weakness in crude oil prices reflects a combination of fundamental factors and financial flows. Fundamentally there is simply too much oil.

 

More Bad News For Oil: Saudis Are Handling Crude Crash Better Than Expected

We’ve spent quite a bit of time this year documenting Saudi Arabia’s fiscal bloodbath. 

In the wake of the kingdom’s move to deliberately suppress crude prices in an effort to preserve market share by bankrupting the US shale complex, Riyadh found itself in a tough spot. Thanks to ZIRP and the wide open capital markets it fosters, US producers were able to stay afloat for longer than the Saudis likely expected. 

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