Considering that the ECB has no charge except to manage inflation, this is extraordinary.
Unsurprisingly, the rates cuts have driven the dollar up.
As Brad Delong Notes, "It is overwhelmingly likely that the current downturn-in-progress will then surpass the united 1979-1982 downturn as the worst downturn since the Great Depression itself."
Bumpy ride, folks.
On the brighter side Bonddad's credit indicators show a thaw in lending over the past few months, and February retail sales beat expectations, though the numbers are still pretty bad.
In autos, GM is saying that there is "substantial doubt" about whether it can survive in an SEC filing, not a surprise, and implies Chapter 11, which further implies liquidation for Chrysler.
Mortgage rates rose last week.
Oil, meanwhile fell in response to the generally anemic economic news.
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