Initial Guidance | 11 March 2016

● U.S. jobless claims hit 5-mo low as labor mkt strengthens | Reuters
● US consumer confidence remains steady in 1st week of Mar | Bloomberg
● US services firms show resilience during mfg recession | WSJ
● ECB’s Draghi plays his last card to stave off deflation | Telegraph
● UK inflation expectations fall to 1.8%, below BOE target | MNI

Best Practices For Monitoring Recession Risk

Recent economic data for the US suggests that the stock market’s hissy fit this year has been a false signal for anticipating a new recession. That’s not surprising—the short-term noise in equity prices is a constant challenge for business-cycle analysis and so it’s not uncommon that market volatility will lead us astray at times. That’s always been the case and nothing’s changed. Looking to markets in isolation of hard economic numbers is a dangerous game if real money is at stake. The challenge is finding a happy medium. The good news is that there are several choices for relatively reliable signals.
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Initial Guidance | 10 March 2016

● Revised GDPNow model estimate for US Q1 growth holds at +2.2% | Atlanta Fed
● US wholesale inventories rose in Jan as sales tumbled | Reuters
● Faltering US economy leads global slowdown | Markit
● Is Passive Investment Actively Hurting the Economy? | New Yorker
● How To Be Wrong As An Investor | Wealth of Common Sense
● Who Gets the Blame for the Slowing Economy? | NY Times
● Google’s AI program beats GO grandmaster | Wired

No Rate Hike Expected At Next Week’s Fed Meeting

The Federal Reserve will leave its Fed Funds rate unchanged at the current target range of 0.25% to 0.50% at its policy meeting next week, writes The Wall Street Journal’s John Hilsenrath–reportedly one of the most “well-connected” journalists on Fed matters. Supporting evidence for anticipating that the central bank will stand pat includes the recent numbers on key Treasury yields, the Effective Fed Funds rate and the market’s inflation expectations.
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Estimating Return-Shortfall Risk For Portfolios

Failure isn’t an option, but it happens. Modeling the possibility that a portfolio strategy will stumble isn’t exactly cheery work, but it’s a productive and necessary exercise for stress testing what the future can do to the best-laid plans for investing. The good news is that there’s a rainbow of options for estimating the potential for trouble. But it’s usually best to start with a basic framework before venturing into more exotic realms.
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Initial Guidance | 8 March 2016

● Federal Reserve’s US employment yardstick sours in Feb | MarketWatch
● US Consumer Spending Up Slightly in Feb | Gallup
● Fed officials set battle lines on rate hikes ahead of FOMC meeting | Reuters
● While market debates commodities bottom, inflation warnings rise | CNBC
● China Exports Plunge In February | RTT
● Japan Q4 GDP Slump Revised Up Slightly; Spending Remains Weak | MNI

Initial Guidance | 7 March 2016

● US payrolls surge in Feb while wages drop | Bloomberg
● US trade deficit widens as exports hit 5-1/2 year low | Reuters
● US Q1 GDP growth estimate rises to +2.2 via GDPNow model | Atlanta Fed
● Is US inflation (finally) rising? | FT
● Spreads and Recession Watch, March 2016 | Econobrowser
● German factory orders fall less than expected in Jan | Reuters
● Japan’s Kuroda signals central bank easing done for now | Reuters

Book Bits | 5 March 2016

Concrete Economics: The Hamilton Approach to Economic Growth and Policy
By Stephen S. Cohen and J. Bradford Delong
Summary via publisher (Harvard Business Review Press)
History, not ideology, holds the key to growth. Brilliantly written and argued, “Concrete Economics” shows how government has repeatedly reshaped the American economy ever since Alexander Hamilton’s first, foundational redesign. This book does not rehash the sturdy and long-accepted arguments that to thrive, entrepreneurial economies need a broad range of freedoms. Instead, Steve Cohen and Brad DeLong remedy our national amnesia about how our economy has actually grown and the role government has played in redesigning and reinvigorating it throughout our history. The government not only sets the ground rules for entrepreneurial activity but directs the surges of energy that mark a vibrant economy. This is as true for present-day Silicon Valley as it was for New England manufacturing at the dawn of the nineteenth century.
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