The US economy slowed in April for the second time in as many months, “led by declines in production-related indicators, according to today’s release of the Chicago Fed National Activity Index, a weighted average of 85 economic data sets. But the deterioration has yet to make a conspicuous dent in the three-month moving average (CFNAI-MA3), which remained virtually unchanged at -0.04 last month vs. a revised -0.05 for March. The three-month average offers “a more consistent picture of national economic growth,” the Chicago Fed advises. By that standard, the US economy is still expanding at a pace that’s only slightly below its historical trend as of last month.
Daily Archives: May 20, 2013
The Lesson From Japan
Japan’s stock market is on a roll, largely because expectations have dramatically changed this year about the underlying state of macro for the planet’s third-largest economy. The iShares MSCI Japan Index ETF (EWJ) is up a potent 24% year-to-date. That’s a substantial premium over the 18% gain for US stocks (SPDR S&P 500 (SPY)), for instance. An aggressive new round of monetary and fiscal stimulus that’s weakened the yen and revived animal spirits explains most of the rally. So-called Abenomics seems to be working. Is Japan’s two-decade stretch of disappointing economic performance finally at an end? Possibly, although a few months of improvement vs. 20 years of stagnation is hardly definitive proof. But let’s leave all that aside and consider the larger point of relevance for investing, namely: the surprise factor.
The Standard Advice (That’s Often Ignored)
Greg Mankiw has a talent for cutting to the chase when it comes to observations of macro and finance and he doesn’t disappoint in his latest NY Times column, which summarizes his view on how to answer the question: What stocks should I buy? The Harvard professor explains that the best response is not to answer at all, at least not directly. An “evasive” explanation, however, is worth a lot in this case. He advises that “the market processes information quickly”, “price moves are often inexplicable”, and “diversification is essential”. Agreed. Mankiw’s writing about stocks, but his succinct guidelines on equities apply to asset allocation too. For all the reasons that holding a low-cost basket of stocks (i.e., an index fund) is appealing from empirical and theoretical perspectives, the same is true for a multi-asset class portfolio. This is old news, of course, but Mankiw’s column reminds that it’s also forever new in the otherwise hazardous business of dispensing investment advice.