Monthly Archives: February 2015

Initial Guidance | 18 February 2015

● Greek deal hopes boost Europe’s stock markets | MarketWatch
● Greece asks for extension; ECB to make crucial bank funding decision | Telegraph
● U.K. Oct-Dec Jobless Rate Falls Unexpectedly | RTT
● Confidence Among U.S. Homebuilders Declines to Four-Month Low | Bloomberg
● New York state manufacturing index falls in February: NY Fed | Reuters
● As Rivals Falter, India’s Economy Is Surging Ahead | NY Times

US Industrial Production: January 2015 Preview

US industrial production is expected to rise 0.3% in tomorrow’s January report vs. the previous month, according to The Capital Spectator’s median point forecast for several econometric estimates. The median prediction reflects a moderate rebound in growth vs. the previous month’s 0.1% decline.
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US Housing Starts: January 2015 Preview

Housing starts are expected to decrease to an annual pace of 1.075 million in tomorrow’s update for January, according to The Capital Spectator’s median point forecast for several econometric estimates. The projection represents a slightly lower level of residential construction vs. December’s 1.089 million units.
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Flirting With Grexit Risk

This is no way to run a railroad. But the powers that be that run the European currency experiment have a taste for brinkmanship and 11th hour deals to avert a crisis. No one’s better at this task for the simple reason that Europe has more crises than a dog has fleas. It’s anyone’s guess if the current standoff with Greece — yesterday’s negotiations over bailout terms ended in a standoff — will end in tears or a solution. But the news to date makes one thing clear: the Eurozone leadership has been and continues to run a reckless policy. That’s partly due to the wobbly structure that is the currency union, which seems to be designed only for sunny macro weather with no mechanisms for dealing with turbulence. But there’s also plenty of blame to go around with the day-to-day management of the negotiations.
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Initial Guidance | 17 February 2015

● Greek impasse weighs on European stocks | MarketWatch
● Eurogroup Grants Greece Time Till Friday To Seek Bailout Extension | RTT
● U.K. Inflation Slows More Than Forecast to Record-Low 0.3% | Bloomberg
● China’s economy to grow about 7% this year: central bank official | Reuters
● Japan Escapes Recession But Q4 GDP Growth Misses Forecasts | WSJ
● German Investor Confidence Rises to One-Year High Before QE | Bloomberg

Book Bits | 14 February 2015

Red Notice: A True Story of High Finance, Murder, and One Man’s Fight for Justice
By Bill Browder
Review via Reading The Markets
Bill Browder has written a book that is by turns gripping, chilling, and moving—a book that impels a reviewer to pile one outraged adjective upon another. Red Notice: A True Story of High Finance, Murder, and One Man’s Fight for Justice (Simon & Schuster, 2015) is a scathing indictment of Putin’s brutal kleptocracy, which Browder and the people connected to his firm, Hermitage Capital, experienced firsthand.
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Research Review | 13 Feb 2015 | Portfolio Design

Smart Beta Through the Lens of Risk Factors
Ben Meng and Paul Zhang
November 18, 2014
We analyze five popular smart beta indices with a simple two risk-factor framework. Our analysis shows that majority of the return variations of these five smart beta indices can be explained by S&P 500 and Barclays Treasury index. We also demonstrate that the diversification effect is limited by including the smart beta indices in an equity index portfolio with a metric called implied breath.
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Retail Spending Stumbled Again In January

Retail sales slumped for the second straight month in January, falling 0.8% vs. the previous month. The decline is well below the 0.5% drop anticipated in the consensus forecast (Econoday.com) and far worse than the slight gain that my econometric modeling implied. But the weakness in headline spending may have more bark than bite due to the ongoing tumble in the dollar value of gasoline sales. In fact, when you look at the year-over-year trend for retail sales ex-gasoline, consumption’s rate of increase continues to improve.
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