Book Bits: 08 February 2025

The Humble Investor: How to find a winning edge in a surprising world
Daniel Rasmussen
Interview with author via Bloomberg
Financial forecasting is a mainstay of finance and economics. Banks use them to analyze how well a company should be doing a few years from now; governments use them to set their budgets. But how often are those prognostications—on which so much depends— actually accurate? Not very often, according to Daniel Rasmussen, founder of Verdad Advisers, author of The Humble Investor: How to Find a Winning Edge in a Surprising World and guest on this week’s episode of Merryn Talks Money.

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Macro Briefing: 07 February 2025

US jobless claims edged up last week, but remain low. The 11,000 increase in new applications for unemployment benefits for the week through Feb. 1 reflects a middling range relative to recent history and near a multi-decade low. The latest report suggests the labor market will continue to expand at a solid pace.

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Risk-On Sentiment Endures, Despite Trade Uncertainty

Years ago there was a TV commercial about a kids’ toy called Weebles, which “wobbled but they don’t fall down.” The line comes to mind in reviewing recent market activity. Since returning to the White House last month, President Trump has outlined a wave of policy changes, plans and comments that have roiled markets and shaken expectations about the economic outlook. But for the moment, the latest squalls of volatility have come and gone, leaving an upside trend that’s a bit battered but mostly intact.

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Macro Briefing: 06 February 2025

US companies accelerated hiring in January, according to the ADP Employment Report. Private payrolls increased 183,000, marking a faster pace for a second straight month. “Hiring momentum in the last quarter of 2024 carried into January with some exceptions, including manufacturing,” notes Nela Richardson, ADP’s chief economist. “We had a strong start to 2025 but it masked a dichotomy in the labor market. Consumer-facing industries drove hiring, while job growth was weaker in business services and production.”

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Macro Briefing: 05 February 2025

US job openings fell to a three-month low in December. The downshift highlights an ongoing slide in openings, which suggests that the labor market’s expansion will continue to slow. The job-openings data “is consistent with the Fed’s view that the labor market is healthy enough to tolerate a more cautious approach to lowering rates, particularly given the uncertainty surrounding tariff policy, says Nancy Vanden Houten, lead U.S. economist at Oxford Economics.

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Macro Briefing: 04 February 2025

President Trump pauses tariffs on Canada and Mexico for 30 days while China announces its own duties on certain US exports. Beijing also says it is adding two American firms to its so-called unreliable entities list, saying they “violated normal market trading principles” and is investigating Google. “These moves are warnings that China intends to harm US interests if need be but still give China the option to back down,” writes Julian Evans Pritchard, head of China economics at Capital Economics in a note.

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Major Asset Classes | January 2025 | Performance Review

January was kind to the major asset classes, marking a strong rebound from a rough month in December. Across-the-board gains last month suggest the year is on a positive trajectory for markets. But the good news became irrelevant in a heartbeat after President Trump announced sweeping tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China – news that threatens to lift inflation, slow growth, upend the global trading system and roil markets.

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