Monthly Archives: October 2015

Initial Guidance | 14 October 2015

● US small business confidence up marginally in Sep | Reuters
● Redbook: US retail sales fall in 1st week of Oct | DJ
● Eurozone industrial output declined in August | Reuters
● China’s inflation rate eases to 1.6% YoY in Sep | RTT
● UK jobless rate falls in report for August | RTT
● China’s Q3 GDP growth expected to slow to 6.8% YoY | Reuters

US Retail Sales: September 2015 Preview

US retail sales are expected to increase 0.1% in tomorrow’s September report vs. the previous month, according to The Capital Spectator’s average point forecast for several econometric estimates. The average prediction reflects a slight deceleration in growth after the previous month’s sluggish 0.2% rise.
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Mr. Market’s Wary Outlook: Less Severe But Still Worrisome

Mr. Market’s cautious outlook of late is less acute at the moment relative to recent history, but it’s not obvious that all’s well. True, the US Stock Market Crash Risk Index is less threatening and a markets-based estimate of US business cycle risk has pulled back after briefly spiking higher in late-August and early September. Does that mean that it’s safe to go swimming in risky waters again? Maybe, but only for investors who: 1) can tolerate a fairly high degree of loss if they’re wrong and 2) are comfortable with a high-risk strategy of attempting to be early. For everyone else—particularly for “conservative” investors—the outlook is still sufficiently hazardous to remain cautious until a more convincing round of risk-on signals emerge.
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Initial Guidance | 13 October 2015

● China’s imports and exports slump in September| Bloomberg
● Germany’s ZEW survey: investor confidence falls to 1yr low in Oct | Bloomberg
● India’s industrial output in Aug rose at fastest pace in nearly 3yrs | WSJ
● German inflation slips back to zero in September | RTE
● UK inflaition goes slightly negative in September | MarketWatch
● Angus Deaton wins Nobel in economics for studying consumption | Reuters

Will Last Week’s Relief Rally In Emerging Markets Last?

Stocks in emerging markets posted their best weekly gain in nearly four years last week. Analysts are divided over whether this is a dead-cat bounce or the start of an enduring mean-reversion trade in the wake of nearly non-stop declines since last-April. From the perspective of the week just passed, however, there’s no doubt that equity markets in so-called emerging countries enjoyed a powerful rally for the five days of trading through Oct. 9.
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Initial Guidance | 12 October 2015

● US import prices fell less than expected in September | RTT
● US wholesale invetories up slightly in August | Reuters
● Money outflows from emerging markets threaten global economy | NY Times
● US NABE Outlook Survey: 2.5% to 2.8% Growth through 2016 | MNI
● Gold at 7-week high as doubts about Fed rate hike persist | Bloomberg

Book Bits | 10 October 2015

The Courage to Act: A Memoir of a Crisis and Its Aftermath
By Ben S. Bernanke
Review via The New York Times (Michael Kinsley)
Yes, the book is a bit of a slog, but it is undoubtedly the best account we will ever have of how government and financial institutions dealt with what has come to be known as the Great Recession. It’s an odd term, isn’t it? It invokes comparisons to the Great Depression and simultaneously suggests that: “Shucks, it wasn’t all that great. Wasn’t a depression or anything.” But Bernanke is persuasive in arguing that (a) it was pretty damned great (i.e., terrible) and (b) he and his colleagues at the Fed deserve credit for the fact that it wasn’t a heck of a lot greater.
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Friday’s Fed Fest On Rate-Hike Odds: Maybe, Possibly, Perhaps

There may be a rate hike around the next bend in the calendar after all. Or maybe not. Like the possibility of rain next Tuesday or peace in the Middle East over the next 50 years, you can’t rule anything out. Ruling it in isn’t a slam-dunk, but today’s lineup of Fed officials on the media-go-round want you to know that tighter monetary policy before the year is out isn’t impossible.
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Macro Markets Risk Index: US Business Cycle Risk Eases

US economic risk has eased in recent days, according to a markets-based estimate of macro conditions. The Macro-Markets Risk Index (MMRI) closed at +3.9% yesterday (Oct. 8) after slipping into mildly negative territory for brief periods since late-August. MMRI’s recent readings in the red mark the first run of negative values since early 2012. It’s important to note that while a markets-based view of the business cycle has turned cautious lately, there’s no confirming support in the hard economic data–at least not based on published numbers to date. Although some indicators are flashing warnings, the majority of key macro indicators are still trending positive for the US.
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