● US multinationals set to face much more pain from strong dollar | Reuters
● Bullard: Fed Policy Aimed At Economy, Not Forex Rates – CNBC | MNI
● Fed: Q4 Household Debt Service Ratio near Record Low | Calculated Risk
● Greek and German leaders meet amid cash shortage fears | BBC
● In Greece, Syriza Struggles to Deliver Promises as Money Runs Out | NY Times
● OPEC won’t bear burden of propping up oil price: Saudi minister | Reuters
Monthly Archives: March 2015
Book Bits | 21 March 2015
● Goals-Based Wealth Management: An Integrated and Practical Approach to Changing the Structure of Wealth Advisory Practices
By Jean L. P. Brunel
Summary via publisher (Wiley)
Goals-Based Wealth Management is a manual for protecting and growing client wealth in a way that changes both the services and profitability of the firm. Written by a 35-year veteran of international wealth education and analysis, this informative guide explains a new approach to wealth management that allows individuals to take on a more active role in the allocation of their assets. Coverage includes a detailed examination of the goals-based approach, including what works and what needs to be revisited, and a clear, understandable model that allows advisors to help individuals to navigate complex processes.
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Chicago Fed Nat’l Activity Index: Feb 2015 Preview
The three-month average of the Chicago Fed National Activity Index (CFNAI) is expected to decelerate to a +0.05 reading in the February update that’s scheduled for Monday (Mar. 23), based on The Capital Spectator’s median point forecast for several econometric estimates. The projection is moderately below the +0.33 reading for January, which reflected a strong above-average pace of economic growth for the US relative to the historical trend. Only negative values below -0.70 indicate an “increasing likelihood” that a recession has started, according to guidelines from the Chicago Fed. Using today’s estimate for February as a guide, CFNAI’s three-month average is expected to remain at a rate of growth that’s slightly above the historical trend.
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Research Review | 20 Mar 2015 | Tactical Asset Allocation
How Often Should You Take Tactical Asset Allocation Decisions?
Byeong-Je An, et al.
March 5, 2015
About once a quarter. We compute optimal tactical asset allocation (TAA) policies over equities and bonds when both asset returns are predictable. By varying how often the weights are reset, we estimate the benefits and costs of different frequencies of TAA decisions. Tactical tilts taking advantage of predictable stock returns generate approximately twice as much value as those market-timing bond returns.
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Initial Guidance | 20 March 2015
● Jobless claims up slightly last week | USA Today
● Continuing Jobless Claims Near a Low, and That May Not Be Good | WSJ
● U.S. Leading Economic Index Rises 0.2% In February, In Line With Estimates | RTT
● Consumer Comfort Little Changed as U.S. Buying Climate Weakens | Bloomberg
● Philly Fed manufacturing index falls to 13-month low in March | Investing.com
● US Q4 current account deficit largest since 2012 | Reuters
The Fed Loses Patience… Sort Of
The Federal Reserve removed the word “patient” from its new policy statement yesterday, signaling that the central bank is inching closer to raising interest rates. But in an attempt to walk a thin line with managing expectations, Fed Chairwoman Yellen advised that “just because we removed the word ‘patient’ from the statement doesn’t mean we are going to be impatient.” The comment certainly resonates when considered with the Fed’s updated economic forecasts, which trimmed the 2015 projection for growth to a 2.3%-to-2.7% range for real GDP vs. the 2.6%-to-3.0% range cited for the December meeting.
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Initial Guidance | 19 March 2015
● Fed Drops Patient Stance, Opening Door to June Rate Increase | Bloomberg
● Fed opens door wider for rate hike but downgrades economic outlook | Reuters
● The Fed sounds slightly worried about the strong US dollar | Quartz
● Oil futures give up gains as oversupply fears resurface | MarketWatch
● Japan’s All Industries Activity Index 1.9% vs. 1.7% forecast | Investing.com
● Wage growth slows in Britain but unemployment falls | Guardian
US Economic Trend | 18 March 2015
February was a rough month in several corners of the US economy, but business cycle risk remains low overall when measured across a broad set of indicators on a trend basis. Yet a weak housing market and softer numbers for the manufacturing sector have raised worries that economic growth isn’t as strong as it appeared to be in previous months. Optimists argue that the recent slowdown is a temporary soft patch due to a harsh winter. That’s a plausible forecast, in part because the all-important labor market continued to post strong growth through February. As for the big picture, the overall macro trend still has a high degree of positive momentum, based on the current numbers.
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Initial Guidance | 18 March 2015
● Is Janet Yellen committed to a summer interest rate hike? | Fortune
● US housing starts see biggest collapse since January 2007 | HousingWire
● Redbook: US retail sales rise in first half of March | MNI
● ZEW: German investor morale at brightest in just over a year | Reuters
● Japan’s Central Bank Warns of Temporary Return to Deflation | NY Times
Housing Starts Fall More Than Expected In February
New construction of US residential housing in February was considerably weaker than expected, raising more doubts about the resilience of the economy’s strength. Analysts were looking for a mild pullback to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.048 million units for last month. As it turns out, that was far too optimistic. The Census Bureau reports that housing starts slumped 17% last month to an annual pace of 897,000, the lowest in more than a year. Is the weakness a danger sign for the macro trend? Or is it just a blip due to a rough winter that’s temporarily weighing on economic activity? No one really knows at this stage, although that doesn’t stop anyone from choosing a narrative that fits their economic worldview.
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