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Tuesday, April 16

16th Apr - US Close: Central Planning Day



Today has been a central planning day. plenty of speakers from the Federal Reserve, in Europe Mr. Draghi spoke to the parliament and then IMF presented its latest World Economic Outlook - which hardly surprised anyone, except perhaps those who still believe in the European Commission and the fairy tale of the eurozone. I will post a quick "special" on the IMF and latest blog storm regarding the seminal paper by Kenneth & Rogoff.


Regular links have been moved to a permanent page.

Previously on MoreLiver’s:

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EUROPE
What’s Stopping Europe?Project Syndicate
After five years of decline in living standards in much of Europe, voters oppose more austerity and further retrenchment without growth. Restoring a sound euro requires policies that revive growth, rein in government spending, and reform heavily regulated labor and product markets.

IMF: mixed outlook for Europe - more ECB action and a fiscal unionOpen Europe

  PIIGS
Bundestag likely to approve Cyprus bailouteuobserver
The German parliament is likely to approve Cyprus' bailout programme despite concerns over a widening funding gap and growth projections which may prove too optimistic.

Cyprus central bank failed in its job, president tells ECBReuters

EU 'aware' that Spanish bailout did not protect fraud victimseuobserver
The EU commission is "aware" that a bailout agreed with the Spanish government means thousands of people will never get their savings back, but says it it is up to courts to help the conned depositors.

More on peripheral painFree exchange / The Economist
…the main reason the single currency is at risk is that the core, and the ECB, are subjecting the union to patterns of nominal growth it simply can't be expected to endure.

  ECB
Speech Draghi: Hearing before the Plenary of the European ParliamentECB

Deposit guarantees and burden-sharing, quote du jouralphaville / FT

UNITED STATES
  FED
Plosser: Now Is A Good Time To Revisit Tightening Plan – WSJ
Evans: U.S. Economy Is ‘Definitely Improving’ – WSJ
Dudley Suggests No Urgency in Paring Back QE3 – WSJ
Yellen Doesn’t See Excessive Risk Taking – WSJ
Tapering Talk: What Fed Officials Are Saying About Winding Down Bond Purchases – WSJ

  MACRO NUMBERS
Fed: Industrial Production increased 0.4% in March – Calculated Risk
Key Measures show low inflation in March – Calculated Risk
Housing Starts increase to 1.036 million SAAR in March – Calculated Risk
A few comments on Housing Starts – Calculated Risk
Housing Starts Surge Due To Rental Housing Construction, Permits Miss – ZH
Housing Starts & Industrial Production Rose In March – Capital Spectator

Interactive Home Price map – N.Y. FED
Updated with latest data.

Another Spring Slowdown?Tim Duy’s Fed Watch
The data flow is not as uniformly positive as it seemed just a month ago.  Arguably, we are experiencing yet another spring slowdown.  This should trigger some monetary policymakers to reassess their predictions that QE could be safely terminated at the end of this year.  But there may be a contigent that has dug in its heels on the issue and are asking themselves "how bad does the data have to get to continue assets purchases"

ASIA
China’s Dream WorldProject Syndicate
Press censorship, repression of dissent, and the absence of organized opposition allow autocratic rulers everywhere to promise whatever they want, with no political consequences for failing to deliver. China has perfected this form of government over the last decade, as President Xi Jinping's first months in power have shown.

OTHER
Things that make you go Hmmm... Grant Williams via John Mauldin (pdf)
34 pages of pure market talk.

EM Bond Snapshot - April 2013Danske Bank (pdf)