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  • Ugly 20Y Auction Sees Biggest Tail On Record Despite Jump In Foreign Demand

    From zerohedge.com

    After last week's solid auctions, traders were optimistically eyeing today's 20Y auction - in the form of a 19-Yyear 10-Month reopening - as some speculated that just because this may be the last fully-sized, $24BN auction before the Treasury starts shrinking the notional next month, demand would be stellar. It wasn't. Stopping at 2.100%, more than 30bps above the September 1.795% high yield, the auction not only had the highest yield since June, but tailed dramatically to the 2.075% When Issued, the biggest tail in the 20Y auction history (which, of course, is not that long since the first auction was just last ... (full story)

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    Fed's Quarles: Must Allow More Time Before Thinking About Rate Hikes

    From @LiveSquawk|Oct 20, 2021

    tweet at 1:14pm: Fed's Quarles: Must Allow More Time Before Thinking About Rate Hikes tweet at 1:16pm: *Fed's Quarles: If Inflation Stays at 4% Next Spring, Fed "Might Have to Reassess" Rate Rise Path tweet at 1:29pm: FED'S QUARLES: A MORE DETAILED LOOK AT THE RULES FOR THE NON-FINANCIAL BANK FINANCIAL SECTOR IS NEEDED TO ENSURE FINANCIAL STABILITY.

    Fed's Quarles: Supports Tapering Fed Bond Buying Next Month

    From @DeItaone|Oct 20, 2021|3 comments

    tweet at 1:00pm: *Fed's Quarles: Supports Tapering Fed Bond Buying Next Month tweet at 1:02pm: FED'S QUARLES: THE FED IS NOT BEHIND THE CURVE ON THE INFLATION FIGHT.How Long is Too Long? How High is Too High?: Managing Recent Inflation Developments within the FOMC’s Monetary Policy Framework Thank you to the Milken Institute for the opportunity to join you today. This morning I'd like to outline my view of current economic conditions and the economic outlook and then turn to the implications for monetary policy. In particular, with employment still well below its February 2020 peak, I will focus on how the escalation in inflation this year is testing the monetary policy framework adopted by the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) in August 2020.1 Outlook for Economic Growth Recent data suggest that growth in the third quarter is likely to be lower than we had expected, but the foundations remain in place for strong economic growth over the remainder of this year and next. Employment is growing, financial conditions are accommodative, businesses are investing, and households, in the aggregate, have a large stock of savings to draw on for future spending. Weaker growth in payrolls in August and September, along with uneven consumer spending in July and August, appear to reflect ongoing concerns in some parts of the country about the spread of COVID-19, especially in high-contact service industries. Supply bottlenecks and labor shortages that have been more widespread and persistent than many expected are camouflaging continued strong underlying demand for goods, services, and workers. Supply constraints are particularly evident in interest-sensitive parts of the economy, such as residential investment and vehicle sales, limiting the scope for additional monetary accommodation to stimulate activity in those sectors. I expect that these developments, however, have for the most part simply postponed activity temporarily and that robust growth will return in the coming months. There is evidence in recent weeks that we seem to be moving into a new phase of the economy. Nominal retail sales rose seven-tenths of 1 percent in September on the heels of a nine-tenths increase in August, an indication that consumers kept up their pace of spending. Robust business investment in equipment and intangibles continued in the second quarter, and indicators suggest another gain in the third quarter. Forward indicators of business spending and the need for firms to replenish depleted inventories point to strong investment into next year. The Labor Market Continues to Strengthen Without a doubt, the headline job gains in August tweet at 1:03pm: FED'S QUARLES: IF INFLATION DOES NOT RECEDE NEXT YEAR, OR IF EXPECTATIONS BECOME UNANCHORED, THE FED'S TOOLS CAN DRIVE INFLATION DOWN. tweet at 1:07pm: QUARLES: CURRENTLY, INFLATION HAS NOT BEEN TOO HIGH FOR TOO LONG

    Weidmann waves the hawkish white flag

    From omfif.org|Oct 20, 2021

    Germany’s difficult coalition-building process has gained fresh complexity following the announcement of Jens Weidmann’s resignation shortly before the European Central bank takes ...

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    Beige Book - October 20th, 2021

    From federalreserve.gov|Oct 20, 2021

    Overall Economic Activity: Economic activity grew at a modest to moderate rate, according to the majority of Federal Reserve Districts. Several Districts noted, however, that the ...

    Japanese yen near 4-year low

    From marketpulse.com|Oct 20, 2021|1 comment

    The Japanese yen is trading quietly in the Wednesday session as the currency continues to have a quiet week. Currently, USD/JPY is trading at 114.27, down 0.28% on the day. Yen ...

    Scotiabank's Holt Sees Eight BOC Rate Hikes by End of 2023

    From youtube.com|Oct 20, 2021

    Derek Holt, head of capital markets economics at Scotiabank, joins BNN Bloomberg to discuss Canada's rising inflation, which hit 18-year highs on a year-over-year basis for the ...

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  • Posted: Oct 20, 2021 1:28pm
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     Newsstand
    Category: Fundamental Analysis
    Comments: 0  /  Views: 658
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