Macro Briefing: 25 April 2018

Western allies press Trump to maintain nuclear deal with Iran: Reuters
US intelligence monitors Iranian cargo shipments into Syria: CNN
A trade war is a major risk for China’s debt-ridden economy: CNBC
Federal judge orders gov’t must accept new DACA immigration applications: WaPo
Unification of Koreas still unlikely as leaders prepare to meet: Reuters
US Consumer Confidence Index rebounded in April after March decline: CB
New home sales in US increased to 4-month high in March: MarketWatch
Richmond Fed Mfg Index turns negative for first time since 2016: Bond Buyer
S&P Case-Shiller Home Price Index surged in Feb, up 6.3% y-o-y: CNBC
Federal Housing Finance Agency: US house prices continued to rise in Feb: HW
Corp bonds with lowest investment-grade rating look vulnerable: Bloomberg
10-year Treasury yield reaches 3.0% for first time since 2014: CNN Money

Slower US GDP Growth Expected In Friday’s First-Quarter Report

The pace of US economic output is set to soften in the government’s “advance” GDP report for the first quarter that’s scheduled for release at the end of this week (Apr. 27), according to several estimates compiled by CapitalSpectator.com. The projection for Friday’s update puts the economy on track to post a slowdown in Q1 growth vs. the previous quarters for the third straight year.
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Macro Briefing: 24 April 2018

Iran issues warning as French President Macron meets Trump: WaPo
Senate panel endorses Pompeo for Secretary of State: The Hill
Will 3% yield on 10-year Treasury reshape investing landscape? Bloomberg
Brent oil above $75 for first time since 2014: MarketWatch
US existing home sales up more than expected in March: AP
Chicago Fed Nat’l Activty Index: US growth moderated in March: Chicago Fed
Eurozone PMI: business activity continued to rise “solid pace in April: IHS Markit
Survey data points to “solid” private sector output in April: IHS Markit

Macro Briefing: 23 April 2018

Peace talks in Korea pose new challenge for Trump administration: The Hill
Trump mistakenly claimed that N. Korea will denuclearize: CNBC
Russia, Ukraine top agenda at G7 meeting of foreign diplomats: Reuters
Will China be sidelined in upcoming US-Korea meetings? NY Times
Supreme Court to hear a challenge to Trump’s travel ban this week: Reuters
Sen. Booker introduced bill offering gov’t jobs for everyone who wants one: Vox
US income inequality due to gains in top-20% of income distribution: VoxEU
Nearly 80% of S&P 500 firms will report Q1 earnings above expectations: Reuters
Will big-tech stocks continue to support US equity market? MarketWatch
Are financial market warning signs starting to flash? The Economist
How will SEC’s new “best-interest” standard affect finance industry? Bloomberg
The wealthy are willing to pay for and expect a longer life: Bloomberg

Book Bits | 21 April 2018

Prediction Machines: The Simple Economics of Artificial Intelligence
By Ajay Agrawal, et al.
Essay by authors via Harvard Business Review
There is no shortage of hot takes regarding the significant impact that artificial intelligence (AI) is going to have on business in the near future. Much less has been written about how, exactly, companies should get started with it. In our research and in our book, we begin by distilling AI down to its very simplest economics, and we offer one approach to taking that first step.
We start with a simple insight: Recent developments in AI are about lowering the cost of prediction. AI makes prediction better, faster, and cheaper. Not only can you more easily predict the future (What’s the weather going to be like next week?), but you can also predict the present (what is the English translation of this Spanish website?). Prediction is about using information you have to generate information you don’t have. Anywhere you have lots of information (data) and want to filter, squeeze, or sort it into insights that will facilitate decision making, prediction will help get that done. And now machines can do it.
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US Business Cycle Risk Report | 20 April 2018

The threat of a global trade war is a risk factor for the global economic outlook, warned the managing director of the International Monetary Fund on Thursday. But in the weeks since President Trump rolled out tariffs on Chinese imports – and China responded in kind – nothing much has changed in the hard data as it relates to the US macro trend.
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Macro Briefing: 20 April 2018

Trump’s trade policies pinch US economic optimism: Bloomberg
N. Korea drops demand that US troops withdraw ahead of talks: Time
Cuba’s new president vows to maintain communism for the island nation: DW
IMF warns of trade-war risk for global economy: The Hill
US will fine Wells Fargo $1 billion for various misdeeds: NY Times
US Leading Economic Index in March points to “robust economic growth”: WSJ
US jobless claims fell slightly last week, near 45-year low: MarketWatch
Philly Fed Mfg Index: expansion continues amid rising costs: Bond Buyer
Most ultra-rich investors expect a US recession within two years: CNBC
Hedge fund assets reach record high: Institutional Investor
US 10-year Treasury yield approaching 3.0% for 2nd time in 2018: Bloomberg

Macro Briefing: 19 April 2018

South Korea’s president: N. Korea seeking “complete denuclearization”: Reuters
Trump highlights perilous aspect of possible US-N. Korea meeting: CBS
NY attorney general investigating cryptocurrency exchanges: CNBC
Fed’s Beige Book reflects concerns about possible trade tariffs: MarketWatch
Oil prices rise to highest level since late-2014: Reuters
Policy sensitive 2yr Treasury yield ticks up to new 10yr high: 2.42%