Predicting market risk is easier than predicting return, as demonstrated in the first installment of this series. The caveat is that we shouldn’t conflate easier with easy. Nonetheless, a simple model of using yesterday’s return volatility proves to be a reliable forecast for today. The key question: how far into the future can we effectively forecast vol with this naïve model? The short answer: the reliability fades, quickly.
Macro Briefing: 9 August 2022
* FBI searches Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home
* Consumer inflation expectations decline, NY Fed survey finds
* Small Business Optimism Index ticks up but still below 48yr average
* US housing sentiment falls to lowest level in a decade, Fannie Mae reports
* Housing inventory in US soars as homebuyers pull back
* Reducing inflation is going be challenging, says markets analyst Jim Bianco
* Public pension plans suffer worst annual performance since 2009
* 3mo/10yr US Treasury yield curve holds above zero, just barely:
US Stocks Led Markets Last Week As Commodities Tanked
American shares rose for a third straight week in trading through Friday’s close (Aug. 5), posting the leading performance for the major asset classes, based on a set of ETFs. Commodities, by contrast, lost ground, suffering the deepest loss last week.
Macro Briefing: 8 August 2022
* Senate passes ambitious health care and climate bill
* China announces more military drills around Taiwan
* China’s trade surplus reaches record high in July
* UN chief condemns “suicidal” shelling around Ukrainian nuclear plant
* SF Fed president says Fed is “far from done” with rate hikes
* The world’s first climate-induced famine torments Madagascar
* US payrolls rose sharply in July, far above expectations
* US 10yr Treasury yield rose last week — first increase in four weeks:
Book Bits: 6 August 2022
● After the Ivory Tower Falls: How College Broke the American Dream and Blew Up Our Politics―and How to Fix It
Will Bunch
Q&A with author via Inside Higher Ed
In his new book, After the Ivory Tower Falls: How College Broke the American Dream and Blew Up Our Politics—and How to Fix It (William Morrow), Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Will Bunch, national opinion columnist for The Philadelphia Inquirer, traces the evolution of American higher education since World War II, exploring how it fueled—and was fueled by—the country’s deep political and cultural divides. In a phone interview with Inside Higher Ed, Bunch attributed many of this country’s current travails—from climate change denial to the Jan. 6 insurrection—to “a failure of education.” Excerpts of the conversation follow, edited for length and clarity.
He largely absolves the Fed of blame for this (though I would have noted that the Greenspan Fed was reluctant to use the regulatory muscle it did have).
Research Review | 5 August 2022 | Multi-Factor Strategies
Combining Factors
Christoph Reschenhofer (Vienna University of Economics and Business)
July 2022
While the academic literature primarily investigates factor exposures based on covariances (i.e. beta exposure), most practitioners apply characteristics-based scorings to obtain factor portfolios. It hereby remains largely unexplored how firm-level characteristics can be combined to obtain optimal factor portfolios. This paper derives multi-factor portfolios that are formed via a combination of stock characteristic scores. Portfolios that are formed on multiple characteristics are less volatile, and exhibit higher after cost returns compared to the market and single factor portfolios. In addition, return, risk and turnover preferences are very sensitive to buy- and sell-thresholds. We further identify optimal weights for individual factor characteristics, but have to recognize the 1/N factor portfolio as a tough benchmark.
Macro Briefing: 5 August 2022
* China continues to conduct provocative military drills around Taiwan
* China imposes sanctions on US House Speaker Pelosi after her trip to Taiwan
* Sharp decline in longer-term bond yields is a key factor in the rebound in stocks
* Americans may be gloomy but remain upbeat about labor market, poll finds
* Bank of England warns that UK will fall into recession this year
* US jobless claims resume upward trend, near 8-month high:
High Dividend Yield And Value Are 2022’s Top US Equity Factors
The stock market is showing some bounce lately, but on a year-to-date basis red ink still dominates. Looking at equities through a factor lens, however, continues to show a wide variety of losses in 2022. Notably, the softest setbacks are (still) in high dividend and value strategies, based on a set of proxy ETFs through yesterday’s close (Aug. 3).
Macro Briefing: 4 August 2022
* China conducts live-fire military drills around Taiwan
* US Senate approves adding Finland and Sweden into NATO
* US factory orders post solid growth for June
* Global economic growth slows to 2-year low in July via PMI survey data
* OPEC agrees to small increase in oil output
* S&P US Services PMI shows contraction in July, but…
* ISM Services Index indicates slightly stronger growth in July:
US Personal Income Barely Recovered In The Economic Expansion
US economic growth is slipping and a new recession may be near. If the current expansion ends at some point in the near future (assuming it’s still alive), the “recovery” in personal income will be the weakest by far among business cycles since 1970.