Have to did through many different sources. A lot of them come from the Fed themselves. Few realize the Fed's website is a treasure trove of data.
Others come from research papers. Of course, when dealing with these numbers it is often guesstimates at best (who can count to 1 trillion let alone 100 trillion).
The banks put out a lot of research. Plus you can look at the market makers.
For example, I used Morgan Stanley's holding $500 billion in repledge Treasuries in one video. That came from their own filings.
For example, the FX reserves are out there by all central banks. A lot of this is just basic arithmatic.
FRED, which is put out by Federal Reserve of St Louis, is a valuable website too.
Have to did through many different sources. A lot of them come from the Fed themselves. Few realize the Fed's website is a treasure trove of data.
Others come from research papers. Of course, when dealing with these numbers it is often guesstimates at best (who can count to 1 trillion let alone 100 trillion).
The banks put out a lot of research. Plus you can look at the market makers.
For example, I used Morgan Stanley's holding $500 billion in repledge Treasuries in one video. That came from their own filings.
For example, the FX reserves are out there by all central banks. A lot of this is just basic arithmatic.
FRED, which is put out by Federal Reserve of St Louis, is a valuable website too.
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I need to start reading these Papers from time to time too. It seems to me that understanding those is a very basic skill that I still lack.
Thanks for the explanation, I’ll start digging from those starting points.