The ISM Manufacturing Index is expected to tick higher to 53.0 in tomorrow’s update for August vs. the previous month, based on The Capital Spectator’s average point forecast for several econometric estimates. The prediction is moderately above the neutral 50.0 mark and so the current outlook still translates into a forecast of growth for this benchmark of economic activity in the US manufacturing sector.
Continue reading
Monthly Archives: August 2015
The Case For A Rate Hike Relies On Forecasts Of Firmer Inflation
Fed Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer over the weekend laid out the rationale for raising US interest rates in the near future, perhaps as early as next month. His reasoning boils down to two main arguments. One, “the economy has continued to recover and the labor market is approaching our maximum employment objective.” Meanwhile, inflation is still low—“persistently below” the Fed’s 2% target, he recognized in a speech on Saturday. But that won’t last, he explained, advising that “there is good reason to believe that inflation will move higher as the forces holding down inflation dissipate further.”
Continue reading
Initial Guidance | 31 August 2015
● US personal income & spending rise in July
● US consumer sentiment slips to 3-month low in August
● A Fed rate hike in September? Maybe, says Fed Vice Chairman Fischer
● Eurozone flash estimate of annual inflation in Aug: stable but close to flat at 0.2%
● German retail sales accelerate, rising 1.4% in August
● Italy retail spending falls for second month in August
● Japan industrial output slides 0.6% in July
Book Bits | 29 August 2015
● Making Sense of Markets: An Investor’s Guide to Profiting Amidst the Gloom
By Kevin Gardiner
Summary via publisher (Palgrave Macmillan)
Making Sense of Markets argues that received wisdom is still far too pessimistic, and that investment opportunities have been missed as a result. It suggests that the great panic of 2008 had its roots in finance, not a flawed global economy, and it tackles some popular concerns – debt, demography, Western decadence for example – head-on, showing succinctly why they have been overdone. The book will then explain how investors can take advantage of these insights in building a long-term investment portfolio. It pays particular attention to behavioral influences such as the interaction of media and markets. It suggests that the conventional view of investing as a search for an optimal portfolio – as opposed to a satisfactory one – is misplaced. It argues that conventional financial analysis, not investors’ living standards, may be the long-term casualty of the latest seizure in capital markets.
Continue reading
US Consumer Spending & Income Rises At Moderate Pace In July
Consumer spending and income continued to post moderate gains, according to this morning’s update for July from the US Bureau of Economic Analysis. Inflation remained tame in the report, with the personal consumption expenditures index higher by only 0.3% from a year earlier. Otherwise the numbers du jour reaffirm the view that a solid if modest US expansion was intact through last month.
Continue reading
A Fed Rate Hike In September? No…Yes…Maybe?
Treasury yields held on to their modest rebound this week through Thursday’s close, ahead of the Federal Reserve annual conference that begins today in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. No doubt the discussions will center on whether the central bank will begin raising interest rates at its Sept. 16-17 policy meeting. Earlier this week, New York Fed chief Bill Dudley threw cold water on the prospects for tightening next month, explaining that the case for a rate hike looked “less compelling” relative to two weeks earlier. The catalyst for his cautious view, of course, is the recent market turbulence. But in the wake of this week’s US economic reports, it’s not obvious that the macro trend is stumbling for the world’s largest economy, even if Mr. Market’s hysterics of late suggest otherwise.
Continue reading
Initial Guidance | 28 August 2015
● US GDP growth revised sharply higher to 3.2% for Q2
● US jobless claims fall 6,000, close to multi-decade low
● US pending home sales edge up in July–up 7.4% from year-earlier level
● US consumer comfort index jumps to 5-week high
● Eurozone economic sentiment ticks higher in August
Encouraging US Data In Today’s US GDP & Jobless Claims Reports
This morning’s macro updates reaffirm the case for cautious optimism on the outlook for the US economy. The revised second-quarter GDP data show that growth was substantially stronger during the April-through-June period: 3.7% vs. the initial 2.3% estimate (seasonally adjusted annual rate). In addition, today’s weekly report on initial jobless claims reveals that this leading indicator for the labor market remains close to multi-decade lows. In short, the latest figures suggest that business cycle risk for the US is still low.
Continue reading
The US Macro Trend Holds Steady To Date Amid Market Turmoil
The only thing worse than crumbling stock prices is a market slide that’s accompanied by a contracting economy. The US has witnessed the former recently, but it’s not obvious that the macro trend is fatally wounded. The outlook for growth remains moderate for the world’s largest economy, which is to say that the trend is more or less unchanged from recent history. As a result, the forecast that the US is slipping into the business-cycle ditch sounds like an emotional reaction to recent market volatility rather than an objective review of the published data to date.
Continue reading
Initial Guidance | 27 August 2015
● A solid gain for US durable goods orders in July
● NY Fed chief says September rate hike is now “less compelling”
● US mortgage applications inched higher last week
● China’s equity market rebounds on Thursday, following Wall Street higher
● Eurozone money supply & private lending growth accelerate in July