There’s a spirited debate raging among economists about the long-run potential for growth in the US economy. Among those who expect that the future will suffer a lesser rate of growth is Robert Gordon, an economics professor at Northwestern and a member of the Business Cycle Dating Committee at the National Bureau of Research. In a series of papers recently (here, for instance), he argues that a number of trends (demographics, wealth inequality, falling educational results, rising debt levels) will squeeze the average annual growth rate of GDP in the decades ahead.
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Monthly Archives: September 2014
US Nonfarm Private Payrolls: August 2014 Preview
Private nonfarm payrolls in the US are projected to increase 230,000 (seasonally adjusted) in tomorrow’s August update from the Labor Department, according to The Capital Spectator’s median econometric point forecast. The expected monthly rise is moderately higher than the previously reported increase of 198,000 for July.
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ADP: August Payrolls Rise 200k-plus For Fifth Straight Month
Today’s data updates on the labor market continue to inspire confidence that the US economy will expand at a moderate pace in the foreseeable future. The ADP Employment Report for August was a bit softer than the crowd was expecting for the monthly comparison, but the year-over-year growth trend held steady last month in the low 2%-plus range. Meanwhile, today’s weekly update on new filings for unemployment benefits shows that initial claims remain close to a post-recession low. In short, the latest numbers suggest that the economy will continue to mint jobs at a healthy pace.
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A Macro Tailwind For Stocks
There’s a growing chorus of warnings from the punditocracy that the US stock market is at risk of correcting. It’s easy to understand what’s motivating the advice: a powerful bull market that’s been pushing higher for five years with few sustained declines of late. The market’s also fairly valued, perhaps over-valued to a degree. It stands to reason that the longer the market rises, the bigger the risk that equities may suffer a sizable setback. Adding to the potential for trouble: various geopolitical risks (think Ukraine and the ISIS threat in Iraq) and a new phase of macro weakness in Europe. No one should dismiss these factors, but for the moment the US market draws strength from a fundamental source: economic growth.
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Risk Premia Forecasts | 3 September 2014
The August update shows a moderate increase in the long-run expected risk premium for the Global Market Index (GMI), an unmanaged, market-value weighted mix of all the major asset classes. GMI is projected to earn an annualized 4.7% return over the “risk-free” rate. That’s up from last month’s 3.9% estimate.
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ADP Employment Report: August 2014 Preview
Private nonfarm payrolls in the US are projected to rise 223,000 (seasonally adjusted) in tomorrow’s August update of the ADP Employment Report, based on The Capital Spectator’s median econometric point forecast. The expected gain is slightly higher than the previously reported increase for July.
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Major Asset Classes | August 2014 | Performance Review
Most markets around the globe bounced back in August after July’s drubbing. Although there’s still plenty of risk percolating around the world, there were few signs that investors were becoming cautious last month.
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ISM Manufacturing Index: August 2014 Preview
The ISM Manufacturing Index is expected to decline slightly to 56.8 in tomorrow’s update for August vs. the previous month, based on The Capital Spectator’s median econometric point forecast. The estimate is still well above the neutral 50.0 mark and so the current outlook remains firmly in growth territory.
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