Recent Posts

Thursday, November 13, 2025

Oh No, Missing CPI Data

It appears that the American October Consumer Price Index (CPI) will not be calculated by the Bureau of Labor [sic] Statistics (BLS), courtesy of the now-ended shutdown. Since the CPI calculations rely on an extremely large survey of data on a particular set of dates, the absence of employees making that survey makes it impossible to recover that data point.

Although this is not too big a deal, I just want to comment on some arcane side effects of this hole in the data.

Thursday, November 6, 2025

De-Liberation Day And Other Topics

Rather than write a few small articles, I am just going to have a single article covering a few threads. My blog writing time has been limited by working on my manuscript.

De-Liberation Day?

Outside observers have argued that the Trump administration’s arguments before the Supreme Court were shambolic at best, and the questioning by judges was viewed as hostile. Although the Supreme Court normally bends to the will of President Trump, the argument that he can impose taxes at will might push the conservatives too far. The recent blowouts of Republicans in state and municipal elections is a reminder that politics has not yet been abolished.

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

Ambling Towards A Crisis?

After 2008, there was a small community who always predicted repeats of The Financial Crisis. The problem the doom-mongers faced was the back side of “The Minsky Cycle”: actors react to a crisis by reducing risk and taking steps to avoid repeating the exact same crisis. That was done throughout the financial system (including Canadian regulators who changed their housing market policies, which was my worry at the time). However, memories fade — and new ways to spawn a crisis pop up.

Financial crises of varying strength have popped up on a frequency of (roughly) once per decade in the United States since the 1960s (when the lingering fear of the Great Depression finally subsided). The COVID recession hit at about a decade after the Financial Crisis — and so we had another crisis that stood in for a financial crisis. The question one might ask is whether the clock is ticking. Although I am fairly permanently pessimistic, I still lean towards a financial crisis being delayed.

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Canada Muddling


Canadian CPI data came out today, and the general trend is that it is bouncing around “normal levels” for an expansion. Although higher than the average for the 1990-2020 period, no reason to get too excited. Grocery prices have been trending higher on a year-over-year basis (4%) since a low in April. To what extent this is partly the result of turmoil in the United States is not clear to me. Although I am not spending too much time handicapping the Bank of Canada, I lean towards the policy rate sticking near current low levels.

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Tariffs And Fiscal Policy

The customs duties data for the United States was recently updated, and we can assess the “success” of Trump 2.0’s tariff policies so far. On an annualised run rate, customs duties were 0.88% of GDP in the second quarter (the latest monthly figure Treasury I saw was around $350 billion annualised versus the $267 billion BEA second quarter figure).

Wednesday, September 24, 2025

Term Premium Comments


I have been looking at term premium models as part of a non-writing project. I decided to take a look at the Kim & Wright model output (available via the Federal Reserve, paper link: http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/feds/2005/200533/200533abs.html). By way of background, there are two very popular term premium models, the Kim & Wright paper, and the one by Adrian, Crump, and Moench (ACM).

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Comparing Bond Yields Across Countries

Toby Nangle recently wrote “How to (more) properly compare bond yields across markets” (non-gift link). The story behind the article is straightforward: commentators are going back to their old habit of comparing the raw yields on 10-year bonds and making assertions about what this means about implied credit quality. As Nangle’s article notes, this is not a good idea, since bond yields embed rate expectations.