Washington braces for resumption of impeachment hearings today: The Hill
US and China close to a trade deal, says White House economic adviser: Reuters
Hong Kong falls into recession as protests continue: BBC
Global debt rose to a new record in the first half of 2019: CNBC
Solid gain for WalMart sales hint at healthy US consumer spending: WSJ
US equity bull market is longest on record, advises Leuthold Group: CNBC
Are Bond Funds Misreporting Their Portfolio Holdings?
Do you know what’s in your bond fund’s portfolio? A recent study finds that a surprisingly large number of funds are fudging the data. As a result, one or more of the bond mutual funds you own may be riskier than you think.
Macro Briefing | 14 November 2019
First day of public impeachment hearing focuses on Ukraine: Reuters
US-China trade talks falter over farm products: WSJ
Fed’s Powell sees steady rates if economy remains on current path: CNBC
China’s economic growth continues to slow, new data shows: SCMP
Germany avoids a recession in Q3, just barely: CNBC
Japan’s economy barely grew in Q3: NY Times
Google plans to enter banking industry by offering checking accounts: The Verge
US core consumer inflation’s 1-year trend ticked down to +2.3% in October:
Value Stocks Lead Growth In 2019 Across All Capitalization Buckets
Has the tipping point for the value factor’s renaissance in US equities finally arrived? It has if we’re keeping score on a year-to-date basis with a set of representative exchange-traded funds. Proxies for the large-, mid- and small-cap corners show a common theme: value tops growth.
Macro Briefing | 13 November 2019
Trump: more tariffs are coming without a China trade deal: Bloomberg
Trump’s top economic adviser hints at middle-class tax cut: CNBC
A viewer’s guide to the start of today’s public impeachment hearings: BBC
Will Supreme Court kill the DACA immigration program? Reuters
The US economy’s influence on voting preferences is fading: WSJ
Ukraine’s president is open to talks with Russia: NY Times
US small business owners remained optimistic in October: NFIB
US Economic Slowdown Expected To Continue In Q4
Preliminary estimates of US economic activity for the fourth quarter are pointing to another downshift in growth, based on the median for a set of nowcasts compiled by The Capital Spectator. It’s still early in Q4 and so the projection should be viewed cautiously. But for now, it’s fair to say that the case appears weak for expecting output to stabilize, much less rebound.
Macro Briefing | 12 November 2019
Trump may take a pass on rolling out new tariffs on auto imports: NY Times
US West Coast imports tumbled in October amid US-China trade war: WSJ
What will Trump say in speech today at the Economic Club of New York? Reuters
The world’s largest trade deal is set for signing in 2020–without the US: CNBC
Google is collecting a massive health database on US citizens: WSJ
German investors’ outlook improves in November: Reuters
The world’s wealthiest individuals are expecting a turbulent 2020: Bloomberg
Trump’s record on equity market returns vs previous presidents: Bloomberg
Introducing: The ETF Portfolio Strategist
The depth and breadth of ETF choices offers unprecedented opportunity for asset allocation design and management. The downside is that keeping track of this realm is burdensome—until now. The Capital Spectator is rolling out a new research service to help manage the information overload: The ETF Portfolio Strategist (ETF-PS).
Macro Briefing | 11 November 2019
Boliva’s president, citing coup, resigns after disputed election: Reuters
Spain’s socialists hold on to power as far-right makes big gains in election: NHK
The Treasury yield curve steepens. Is that a risk-on signal? WSJ
UK growth slows to 1% year on year rate in Q3, slowest in nearly a decade: BBC
US small-business owners’ optimism continues to edge up in 2019: Gallup
US consumer sentiment improved slightly in November: MW
US stock market volatility (VIX Index) slipped to 3-month low on Friday:
Book Bits | 9 November 2019
● How Money Became Dangerous: The Inside Story of Our Turbulent Relationship with Modern Finance
By Christopher Varelas and Dan Stone
Review via Kirkus Review
Varelas charts the evolution—or, more, accurately, devolution—of the modern financial sector, noting that when banking firms went public there was no longer a personal stake in the game but instead only “employees looking to maximize annual compensation” without sufficient concern for risk, one of what Walt Disney called “the hard facts that have created America.” Other negatives in the system, writes the author, are time-sensitive algorithms whose speed divorces prices from “reality” and a corporate culture that turns the financial-sector worker into “merely a cog in a global delivery mechanism.” The author’s exercise in forensic accounting as he examines a case of government bankruptcy is particularly fascinating.