Every atomic assertion extracted from the underlying record, ranked by evidence strength.
Real growth cannot be obtained from monetary policy alone.
The current low interest rates accomplish market distortion.
The Fed's quantitative easing and zero interest rates helped the stock market but not the economy.
The 10-year Treasury yield is going to go toward 1% over the next year.
Dow futures are down 29, two-tenths.
NASDAQ e-mini futures are off five points, one-tenth.
Three Fed speakers are scheduled for today.
Bonds are mixed at the moment.
The yield curve is flattening some.
The 10-year note yield falls a basis point to 1.82 percent.
The five-year yield is at 1.36 percent.
The two-year yield rises just a touch to 0.88 percent.
G7 ministers met over the weekend.
G7 ministers had no coordinated plan on growth.
G7 ministers will cooperate on currencies.
The dollar is basically unchanged at 95.362.
The euro is trading at 112.06.
The yen got stronger today, 109.45.
Haruhiko Kuroda was on CNBC overnight.
Commodities are a little soggy.
The Canadian dollar (Looney) is 131.60, weaker this morning.
Invesco believes it's time to say goodbye to the traditional 60-40 stock bond allocation.
Invesco suggests alternatives as a core part of modern portfolios.
Jim Bullard has already spoken, with nothing new from him.
The DAX in Germany is down 75 points, three-quarters of a percent.
Stocks in Europe overall are lower by about two points, half a percent on the day.
S&P futures are off four points, two-tenths.
Sri Kumar believes the Fed should have raised rates two years ago.
The Fed is a prisoner of its own policies.
The 2-10 spread is signaling an economic slowdown.
Core inflation is still well below the Fed's target.
The Eurozone is dealing with deflation.
Japanese deflation is getting worse.
The Chinese wholesale price index has been negative for about four years.
President Obama removed a 50-year-old ban on selling arms to Vietnam.
Two suicide bombers hit Yemen's southern port city of Aden today, killing at least 45 people.
Commodities are sliding, led by metals.
Stocks in Europe are declining.
S&P E-mini futures are down three points.
Dow E-mini futures are down 23.
NASDAQ E-mini futures are down two.
The Ten-year Treasury is up 5.30 seconds, with a yield of 1.82%.
NYMEX crude oil is down 1.2% or $0.60 to $0.4782 a barrel.
COMEX Gold is down 0.3% or $3.80 at $12.49, 10 an ounce.
The one-year moving average of the 10-year yield is 2.07%.
CME Group S&P 500 and NASDAQ 100 futures trade nearly 24 hours with great liquidity.
ETF markets have less volume and liquidity after 4 p.m. until the next morning.
A global workforce of 300,000 at IBM can use AI to fill their HR questions.
IBM's AI resolves 94% of common HR questions.
Europe and attachment to Europe looks worse every single day.
The business cycle dynamics since World War II have not changed.
The Brexit debate is in full cry in London.
Bayer made a $62 billion offer for Monsanto.
The UK government forecast that leaving the EU would cause a year-long recession.
The FTSE is down 21 points, three-tenths of a percent.
The pound is trading at 144.67, down a quarter of a percent this morning.
Bayer shares are lower this morning.
Monsanto shares are up 8.8% to $110.48.
Monsanto's offer is $122 a share.
Investors are not liking something about the Bayer-Monsanto deal.