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The "Long USD" Trade Has Never Been More Crowded

Shortly after the Fed adopted the so-called “clean relent”, in September, we explained the dollar dilemma Janet Yellen faces in hiking rates. The problem for the Fed - and this is well worn territory by now - is that even as 25 bps might fairly be characterized as merely “symbolic”, it still marks a notable policy divergence from the rest of the DM world which is still in easing mode. 

Virtually Every Wall Street Strategist Expects "No End To The Bull Market"

Soaring junk bond redemptions; rising investment grade (and high yield) yields pressuring corporate buybacks; record corporate leverage and sliding cash flows; Chinese devaluation back with a vengeance; capital outflows from EM accelerating as dollar strength returns; corporate profits and revenues in recession; CEOs most pessimistic since 2012, oh and the Fed's first rate hike in 9 years expected to soak up as much as $800 billion in excess liquidity. To Wall Street's strategists none of this matters.

10 Investor Warning Signs For 2016

10 Investor Warning Signs For 2016

Submitted by Michael Pento via Contra Corner blog,

Wall Street’s proclivity to create serial equity bubbles off the back of cheap credit has once again set up the middle class for disaster. The warning signs of this next correction have now clearly manifested, but are being skillfully obfuscated and trivialized by financial institutions. Nevertheless, here are ten salient warning signs that astute investors should heed as we roll into 2016.

Core CPI Rises 2.0% Driven By Surging Rents, Giving Fed Green Light To Hike Rate

Core CPI Rises 2.0% Driven By Surging Rents, Giving Fed Green Light To Hike Rate

Just hours before the FOMC sits down in the Marriner Eccles to discuss just how it will announce the first rate hike in 9 years, 7 years to the day after it cut rates to zero, it got the best gift from the BLS it could have asked for: core inflation rose precisely the amount the Fed wanted from a year ago, ot 2.0% on the dot, the highest annual core CPI increase in the past year. Why the jump? "About two-thirds of this increase is accounted for by the shelter index, which rose 3.2 percent over the span."

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