Michael Ashton - Comments
Inflation Products and Markets Expert
Contributor's Links: E-piphany What’s Wrong With Money?
On Bloomberg TV his audiences know him as the “Inflation Guy.” In the inflation markets he is known as a pioneer, having traded the very first interbank US inflation swaps and having been the sole market maker for the CPI futures contract. He is considered as the ...more
Latest Comments
Higher Wages: Good For You, Not Good For Stocks
7 years ago

That's true! I would even concede billions rather than millions. But to displace the dollar, that needs to be tens of trillions. I don't think (and I may be wrong!) that you can build a currency on dark commerce alone.

In this article: SPX
Avoiding The Rattlesnakes In Monetary Policy
7 years ago

Wages are rising at 3.3% per annum. Not sure what "higher wages" means here, but that's well above inflation so it would seem they are responding to low unemployment. Indeed, they are responding almost exactly as the Phillips Curve would suggest: www.talkmarkets.com/.../the-phillips-curve-is-working-just-fine-thanks

So I'm not sure what the objection is. Yes, the Fed doesn't understand how this works, and so they'll screw it up almost for certain. I think we agree on that!!!

Avoiding The Rattlesnakes In Monetary Policy
7 years ago

No, I am saying that interest rates do not affect wages. They can WANT to clip wages because they fear wage inflation, but wage inflation responds to labor supply, not interest rates. See my recent Phillips Curve column.

Avoiding The Rattlesnakes In Monetary Policy
7 years ago

Raising rates will not affect wages.

The Internet Has Not Killed, And Will Not Kill, Inflation
7 years ago

I didn't say it is.

However, M2 has been up steadily at 6%+ per year, which is too high to be consistent with disinflation or deflation. And that money IS on main street.

Can't Blame Trump For Everything
8 years ago

Nowhere close to trillions of dollars of bonds being used as collateral. Most of the derivatives markets trades net - the 500+ figure exaggerates the risk probably by a factor of a thousand at least. Banks are hedged against interest rate increases on their assets anyway. It's changes in their business where they can get hurt. Not to say some won't lose money on bets the Fed was going to go slower, but at least in the US there's essentially zero systemic risk now - not like in 2007.

In this article: TIP
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