Sign in
Sign in
Recover your password.
A password will be e-mailed to you.
Browsing Category
Markets
The four horsemen of this cyclical bull market rally
Yesterday I made up the phrase “The Four Horsemen of this rally” when discussing the bull market rally with a colleague. What I was trying to get at was the unsustainable nature of a divergence between top line revenue growth and the…
The ‘Perfect Storm’
Going forward, equity markets are likely to have a much bigger impact on the economy than has been the case in the past. This is a simple conclusion derived from the fact that total equity market value today is 1.2x GDP. 35 years ago, when…
Quick thoughts on the US economy and equity markets
This past week, I have been focusing on the US economy and the Fed’s reaction function. I would summarize my view as positive about the cyclical trajectory of the US economy but concerned about so-called secular stagnation due to high…
Should the Fed look through weak Q1 consumption data?
The biggest question facing the Federal reserve is whether their data dependency means looking through weak Q1 data and raising rates this summer anyway. Given the key elements of the Fed’s reaction function as I laid them out yesterday,…
Japan redux: Fed rate hikes are coming this year, but at what pace?
The title of this post is what the Fed wants us to believe. It wants us to believe that it is prepared to raise interest rates this year but that it will increase them slowly by assessing the data, hiking once and re-assessing, and then…
Front-running the Fed on interest rate hikes
The biggest takeaway from the latest Federal Reserve Open Market Committee meeting was the reduction in the ‘normal’ rate of unemployment from the 5.2-5.5% range to a 5.0-5.2% range. While the Fed did remove its ‘patient’ language regarding…
Euro parity and GBP and USD current account balances
Yesterday, was a strong dollar day but it was also a euro weakness day as the euro recorded 12-year and 8-year lows versus the USD and GBP respectively. I think what we are seeing here is an emergence of the eurozone as a current account…
Partying like it’s 1994
This post is a riff on a Paul Krugman post he titled “Partying Like It’s 1995”. I cam across Krugman’s post via Stephen WIlliamson, who makes some valid points about the Fed’s raising rates in 1994 that bear noting.
Five Investing Themes That Need Further Examination
Tiger 5 - Grexit is inevitable
2015 as 1994: more on Fed hikes this year
Bill Gross and David Rosenberg are two smart investors who represent the dichotomy in markets right now. Rosenberg doesn't see the Fed hiking rates until 2016, while Bill Gross points to June (link here). Which side of this debate you take…