Hold all my calls
@bhgreeley
PhD candidate in the history of finance at Princeton. Working on early-modern Atlantic currencies. Writing a trade-press history of the dollar and a dissertation about the guinea. I used to be a journalist. I used to be a lot of things.
Hold all my calls
Oh man we are HAVING A NEWS DAY I see
*BLACKROCKβS $26 BILLION PRIVATE CREDIT FUND LIMITS WITHDRAWALS
The mehconomy
Every day I ask myself, buddy. Every day.
POD O'CLOCK
God knows there's enough to worry about, but please find space in your head to also worry about stablecoins.
@robarmstrong.bsky.social and I chatted to brainbox @bhgreeley.bsky.social to explain why
www.ft.com/content/f9c8...
Donβt forget eyebrows
It always makes me so happy to share someoneβs dream job
What a day to cover this topic.
Short version: Financial hegemony is when you don't need to start wars to get what you want; and also when, if you π₯π° start a war*, your borrowing cost goes down and your currency goes up.
* Which you'll be tempted to start one regularly.
Well played.
Yeah, that's what I thought.
OMG BIG TRUTH
Monetary theorists: do we pronounce "chartalist" as 1) "chartalist," or 2) with what's evidently the proper Latin, "kartalist"?
Promise?
This is comforting, thank you. I started the PhD in the middle of writing the book because I had reached a point sitting alone in a room where I thought either a) these are good and new ideas, no one's ever done this before or b) no one's ever done this before because the ideas are insanely stupid.
Did everyone else go through a moment in their dissertation sitting in the archives looking at a cart of documents, when the full astringent shock of how little you know hits you, followed by the faint bitter aftertaste of how implausible your idea is?
There's a brief section in my dollar book where I try to explain bank money creation because you can't understand dollar notes and deposit dollars with a loanable funds model in your head.
Please do this. Writing financial history I have this regular challenge where I have to first remind people what they were taught in college about money and banking, then I have to tell them it was wrong.
I regularly have to explain to students in their third or fourth year of an undergrad economics degree that commercial banks create most of our money when they make loans.
Chart of the day - from a column by @katie0martin.ft.com on the death of the Trump trade. Chart by @raydouglas.bsky.social www.ft.com/content/cfdc...
My only issue with London is that I canβt stop singing βWalthamstowβ to the tune of βGangnam Style.β
If the President of the United States has free rein to address fundamental international payments problems then I would like to announce my candidacy
Boss: Oh never mind
Clerk to other clerk afterwards: I can't believe he just made me waste an entire page
A handwritten page in an old ledger that begins βto all whomβ and then abruptly ends
I mean, starting a proclamation for the Royal Mint and then forgetting what the hell you were going to proclaim, who hasnβt been there before
A clerk in 1693 or so doodled the word βelephantβ on his ledger for no clear reason. Office work has always been boring.
Regulatory clarity: I clearly donβt wish to be regulated
WH tells NY Fed it is subject to The Mandate Of Kevin.
There is nothing in finance that canβt be done more profitably with less oversight
This open contempt makes me worried about what's going to happen to the research staff at the Fed's Board of Governors under the other Kevin.
This answer - from one of the presidentβs key economic advisors - is disgraceful.
And, fwiw, the number for tariff pass through is closer to 94-96 percent