Daily Archives: September 22, 2011

A 15-Year Review

John Bogle, the founder of Vanguard and the man who gave the masses the first index fund, was reminiscing recently. In a talk he gave earlier this month, Bogle reviewed the lessons in a 15-year-old bit of investment advice. “I thought it would be fun, interesting, and provocative to examine what’s happened over the exciting era since I made my policy recommendations.” In particular, he revisited his recommendations from the summer of 1996 and “how they compared with the actual results of the average endowment fund tracked by The National Association of College and University Business Officers,” aka NACUBO.

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A Little Recognition Never Hurts

$avingsAccount.org thinks The Capital Spectator is among the top-50 investment blogs. Thank you very much. Unfortunately, I left my acceptance speech in my other suit. No matter–the real tribute is sharing a list with so many extraordinary blogs and web sites. Suffice to say, I’m humbled. Meanwhile, if you’re looking for an accounting of some of the leading analysts on economic and financial matters, the $avingsAccount.org roster is sure to please.

Jobless Claims Fell Last Week, But The Trend Still Looks Troubling

New jobless claims fell last week, but the drop doesn’t look all that convincing. It’s been clear for some time that filings for unemployment benefits have been trending higher, and for a fundamental reason: the economy has slowed. The surge in new claims back in the spring warned of no less, when the consensus outlook for the economy was still relatively bubbly. Once again, claims have proven their value as a forward-looking indicator. Alas, the current forecast in these numbers isn’t encouraging. In sum, it’s going to take a lot more than one modest down week to persuade the crowd that this series has returned to a virtuous cycle.

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Strategic Briefing | 9.22.2011 | The Fed’s “Operation Twist”

Twist and Yawn
David Beckworth (Macro and Other Market Musings) | Sep 21
The Fed decided today it would lower the average maturity of publicly-held treasuries by selling $400 billion of shorter-term treasuries and buying the same amount of longer-term treasuries. In addition, the Fed also reconfirmed its commitment to maintain the size of its mortgage holdings and anticipated its targeted interest rate would remain low through mid-2013. The burning question now is how big of an impact will the Fed’s new treasury maturity transformation or “operation twist” program have on the economy? Not much in my view. It should add some monetary stimulus, but like the original operation twist its effects will probably be modest and do little to spark a robust recovery… Without an explicit target to permanently shape expectations about future spending and inflation, it is hard to see how this new stimulus program will have any more lasting power than QE2. The Fed needs to quit throwing large dollar programs at the economy and instead commit to buying up as many assets as needed until some nominal GDP (or price) level target is hit.

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