‘Dollar’ View Of Demand

 | Nov 25, 2015 01:19AM ET

If China is struggling with the various facets of the interconnected nature of eurodollar function, then we don’t have to go far to see that in almost perfect clarity. By many accounts, funding and liquidity remain highly disturbed and becoming more uniformly so. From gold to francs to copper to junk debt, pricing reflects more so a combined economic and financial outlook.

As noted yesterday, if these disturbances were related to the normalization of rate regimes in the Fed’s exit from extraordinary “accommodation”, then we would expect nothing like what we see here. In junk bonds and commodities, a steeper money curve reflective of burgeoning economic circumstances would be quite favorable if not highly desirable. Instead, everything is collapsing more so like 2011 and even 2008 than 2010 or, as the Fed would have it, 2003. The Asian observations this morning look very much like the unstoppable skyrocket in LIBOR flowing elsewhere and everywhere.