Episodit
-
On Thursday, the Bureau of Economic Analysis, commonly known as the BEA, will release revised data on the national income and product accounts going back to the start of 2019. This is an annual process, usually only mildly interesting to economists and ignored by everyone else. However, this year itâs more important since it could help clarify the trajectory of the economy at a critical time for both political and monetary policy choices. Itâs also important because it could help resolve at least some of a yawning discrepancy between the estimates of output produced and income received in the American economy.
-
Cutting short-term interest rates from a peak is a little like hauling a piano down a flight of stairs. The operation is best done slowly and with care.
The Federal Reserve will probably show some awareness of this in their actions and communications this week. That being said, one of the greatest identifiable dangers to the economy and markets today is that the Fed, by acting too aggressively or talking too negatively, increases the risk of the economy falling into recession.
-
Puuttuva jakso?
-
On Wednesday of next week, the Federal Reserve will almost certainly embark on its long-anticipated easing cycle. However, whether the first cut in the federal funds rate is 25 or 50 basis points is still very much in doubt. This is a crucial question for the economy and financial markets since a 50 basis point cut might well do more harm than good if businesses, consumers and investors saw it as a signal that the Fed is worried about recession.
The most important issue for the Fed as they debate this decision is the strength of the U.S. labor market. It is quite clear that job growth has slowed over the past year as the post-covid rebound has faded. But is the labor market stalling, or just slowing to a more gradual pace?
-
The U.S. working age population is growing relatively slowly. The Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that the U.S. population aged 18 to 64 grew by less than 0.1% over the past year.
-
Every August, for more than 40 years now, the Federal Reserve has held a retreat in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. It has become an important venue for Fed communications and investors this week will be focused on Jerome Powellâs speech, to be delivered at 10:00AM eastern time (or 8:00AM Wyoming time) on Friday.
The topic of this yearâs conference is âReassessing the Effectiveness and Transmission of Monetary Policyâ, a subject that is well worth careful reconsideration. This, no doubt, will be the focus of Chairman Powellâs remarks.
-
The last two weeks have provided a vivid reminder of how sensitive markets can be to small changes in the macro-economic outlook.
With a nudge down in oil prices, the Fedâs 2% inflation goal suddenly seems achievable within a matter of months. With a slight weakening in the labor market, the unemployment rate has shifted to a trajectory that has foreshadowed recession in the past. In response, the 10-year Treasury yield fell from 4.29% on July 24th, to 3.78% on August 5th while the VIX index, a measure of stock market volatility, more than doubled over the same period, with stock prices falling sharply by the close of business last Monday.
-
We live at a time when extreme voices get the most attention and so it is tempting, following a string of weak economic numbers, to yell the word ârecessionâ. However, a balanced assessment of demand and supply suggests that we are, thus far, merely transitioning to slower growth. A slower growth path is a more vulnerable one, particularly because excessive monetary ease is more likely to weaken than strengthen the economy in the short run. Nevertheless, barring some outside shock, the baseline scenario should be a slowdown scenario, even as volatile markets remind investors of the importance of diversifying and paying attention to valuations.
The mood on the economy has changed quite quickly. The economic headline from just 12 days ago was that real GDP growth had, yet again, surprised to the upside, coming in at a robust 2.8% for second quarter, well above the 2.1% consensus expectation. Since then, however, we have seen higher-than-expected weekly unemployment claims and weak readings on construction, durable goods orders, home sales and manufacturing activity. This was topped off, on Friday, by a softer-than-expected employment report, both in terms of payroll job gains and the unemployment rate.
-
My wife, Sari, and I love old movies and one of our favorites is the Long, Long Trailer, staring Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz. Desi and Lucy are newly-weds who decide, instead of buying a house, to purchase a trailer home which they hitch onto the back of their car and set off on their adventures. Soon, without any idea of how to drive such a contraption, they find themselves ascending into the Sierra Nevada mountains, driving up steep, narrow and twisty mountain roads. Unbeknownst to Desi, Lucy decided to collect rocks as souvenirs along the way which she hid all over the trailer, adding extra weight to an already dangerously unwieldy vehicle. The funniest part is watching them making small talk, pretending nothing is going on, as their car engine roars, gears squeal and little rocks spit out from their tires, over the cliffs and out into the abyss below. The contrast between the nonchalance of their conversation and the terror in their eyes is priceless and it only increases as they head over the peak and begin to descend.
The most dangerous time, both for oversized trailers and central bankers, is when you begin to descend from a peak. Recent data suggest the Fed should, finally, begin to cut rates in September. This operation could work out OK. However, it is a delicate one and, particularly, when both markets and portfolios appear to be overconcentrated, it is important that investors take what steps they can to maintain or regain balance in their portfolios.
-
Despite a slightly higher-than-expected payroll job gain, the June employment report was on the soft side, with downward revisions to payroll gains from prior months, a drop in temporary employment and only modest gains in wages. However, the weakest aspect of the report was the unemployment rate, which edged up from 4.0% to 4.1%. This, in itself, wouldnât be particularly notable were it not for the fact that the unemployment rate has now risen steadily over the past 14 months from a 54-year low of 3.4% set in April of last year.
-
The play, entitled âSteadily She Slowsâ, has, from a dramatic perspective, turned out to be a dud.
It started with such a promising prologue of pandemic, recession, recovery, political upheaval, war and inflation. However, it has since settled into a drawn-out, repetitious script, wherein the lead actor, consumption, hogs the center stage and the supporting cast, in the form of investment spending, government spending and trade, has very little impact on the plot. The promoters, on cable news shows and social media feeds, do their very best to gin up public interest by prophesying catastrophic collapse into recession or reignited and blazing inflation. But still the play drones on, unloved by all, except, of course, the investors, who are profiting handsomely from its extended run.
-
As a young lad growing up in South Dublin, I received certain geography lessons on where I could, or could not, safely roam. In particular, I was warned not to stray north of OâConnell Street. I remember debating my mother on the issue, once when I wanted to go to a movie at a theatre near Parnell Square. I canât remember exactly what I said, but I probably claimed that bad things didnât happen on the North Side quite as frequently as South Side mothers thought they did. But my mother held her ground on this occasionâŠsomeone might or might not get beaten up in Parnell Square that afternoon. But if her son wasnât there, it wouldnât be him.
After almost every speech, someone asks me about risks â what keeps me up at night. And today, with a soft-landing economy and the stock market near record highs, it does seem like a good time to review risks. But itâs important to recognize the most obvious point about market risk. The risk to you, as an investor, isnât simply the danger of some negative event â it is the product of the probability of that event and your exposure to it. How you are positioned says a great deal about how worried you should be about any risk.
-
Every three months, the 19 members of the Federal Reserveâs Federal Open Market Committee, of FOMC for short, aided, no doubt, by an army of econometric minions, work up new forecasts for key economic variables and their assessment of appropriate monetary policy. In recent days, as they have huddled in their offices engaged on this task, theyâve had much to be thankful for. The economic roller coaster triggered by the pandemic and the policy response, which manifested itself in wild swings in output, unemployment and inflation, has subsided. Moreover, the very narrow road by which they thought inflation could be subdued without triggering a recession, turned out to be not so narrow after all. The U.S. economy has maintained solid economic growth and a very tight labor market even as inflation has fallen towards their 2% objective.
-
For centuries, economists have extolled the almost magical properties of competitive markets. In the 1770s, Adam Smith wrote about an âinvisible handâ by which individuals end up promoting the common good even though they only ever intended to do themselves a bit of good. In the 1970s, Milton Friedman spoke passionately of the virtues of a free-enterprise system in boosting innovation and productive activity. Such voices are quieter now and much of modern economic commentary is devoted to how to fix an economy when markets fail or how governments and central banks should seek to manipulate it. However, the U.S. economy in the wake of the pandemic should serve as a reminder of the power of simple economics. No matter how abnormal the starting point, an economy will, if sufficiently neglected by the government, tend towards balanced growth.
-
One of the most common plotlines in all of literature is when a protagonist, overestimating the gravity of a situation, responds with a series of unfortunate decisions. Perhaps the classic example of this is Romeo, not appreciating the difference between a sleeping Juliet and a dead Juliet, but the pattern has played out in innumerable stories.
When it comes to the state of the economy, it seems clear that Americans are harboring too negative a view. In the short run, this misapprehension may not lead to disaster. However, it could still imperil investment returns if it leads to political decisions that make a relatively healthy economy sick.
-
The importance of any piece of economic information depends on your time horizon. For traders, the issue is how it will move markets today. For politicians, its relevance lies in how it could shape public opinion between now and the next election. However, for long-term investors, what really matters is how it will impact the economic and financial environment for decades to come. From this last viewpoint, there is no more important topic than the continued deterioration in the federal finances.
Information released in the last few days provides an updated perspective on this issue. However, before delving into this, letâs take a quick look at upcoming economic data.
-
The most common scavenger bird in the western United States is the turkey vulture, more commonly called the turkey buzzard. It is a marvel of evolution, with keen eyesight and an extraordinary sense of smell, allowing it to locate the recently deceased from miles away. Ungainly as it takes off with furious flapping, once in the air it is a majestic creature, soaring thousands of feet upwards on air thermals, with an out-spread V-shaped wing span of up to six feet. As it circles from a height, it surveys the landscape below and then plunges to feast on the remains of less fortunate creatures.
I donât believe in reincarnation but, if I did, I would have to say the best real estate investors were probably turkey buzzards in a previous life. And never more so than today, when the real estate landscape is littered with the victims of the seismic changes wrought by the pandemic and a sudden return to normal interest rates, following 15 years of super-easy money.
-
I have never been blessed with any skill in golf. However, I do have some imagination and so I can imagine a situation in which I am lining up a long and difficult putt. With well-justified humility, I wince as I strike the ball, knowing it will miss. However, even two or three seconds after sending it on its way, I realize that, surprisingly, Iâm still not sure how it will miss â I canât quite tell if itâs going to miss to the right or to the left. And so, of course, the ball trundles its zig-zaggy way up to the lip of the hole, pauses, and then topples in.
Last weekâs GDP report ignited angst on both sides. Some worried that the economy was slowing too much, with recession in the offing. Others saw too much inflation, requiring an even more aggressive Fed campaign to squash it before it begins to reaccelerate in a serious way.
-
Since the advent of modern financial markets, bonds have always had the reputation of being conservative â rather like an elderly family lawyer in a leather-bound chair frowning at more jumpy and excitable stocks. Bonds would never make you rich. However, they would provide you with a moderate, steady and dependable income.
This reputation was challenged in the 1970s and 1980s by Treasuries yielding more than 10%, in the wake of high inflation, and the explosive growth of the high-yield market. In the decades that followed, yields drifted down in parallel with inflation but investor excitement was maintained by a steady stream of capital gains as well as income. However, once monetary easing hit its peak in the days following the Great Financial Crisis, high-quality bond yields fell to levels that promised very little income and, at best, modest capital losses, assuming yields eventually recovered.
-
Growing up in New England, our sons had a privileged childhood as sports fans and particularly as football fans. Between 2001 and 2020, the New England Patriots, coached by Bill Belichick and with Tom Brady at quarterback, competed in nine super bowls and won six of them - a truly extraordinary performance in a league of 32 teams. It is all the more impressive because of the NFLâs efforts to make the league competitive. These include the salary cap, which forces all teams to spend roughly the same on their rosters, and the draft, which awards the top picks to the worst teams from the year before.
And yet the dynasty continued for almost two decades, with the Patriots winning many games that they should have lost due to their own confidence and their opponents doubts. And the supposedly eroding effects of low draft picks seemed to have little impact on the team, as relatively unknown players found a way to win.
-
Next Monday, I once again get to lace up my shoes and join my friends from the Dana-Farber team in running the Boston Marathon. This year will be particularly special, as both of our sons are also running the race.
One of the advantages of being an older member of the team, (and I can testify to plenty of disadvantages), is that you accumulate advice that you can share with younger members, particularly those who are running their first marathon. One such piece of advice is to drink before you are thirsty and to eat before you are hungry.
By the time you are thirsty, when running a marathon, you are likely severely dehydrated and low on electrolytes, causing, at best, a sharp deterioration of your performance. By the time you are hungry, your blood sugar will probably be too low, making the rest of the race slow and painful. In short, in long-distance running, one key is to make decisions before it feels like you need too.
- Näytä enemmän