Economists expect no change in interest rates today when the Fed publishes its monetary policy statement at 2:00pm eastern. Briefing.com’s consensus forecast calls for Fed funds to remain at the zero-to-0.25% target rate that’s prevailed since 2008. Surprising? Not really, courtesy of the recent run of wobbly economic data. Does market data agree? Oh, yeah. The numbers speak loud and clear. If Yellen and company announce a rate hike later today, it’s going to be a major surprise by Mr. Market’s reckoning, as we’ll see in the following tour of the numbers.
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Initial Guidance | 28 October 2015
● US durable goods orders continue to fall in September | USA Today
● US business investment is also weak in September | Bloomberg
● US house prices up 5.1% YoY in August | CNBC
● UK Q3 GDP growth slows more than expected | Reuters
● Conference Board’s US Consumer Confidence Index falls In Oct | MarketWatch
● Richmond Fed index: mfg contraction eases in Oct | DJ
Q3:2015 US GDP Estimate: +2.5% | 27 October 2015
US economic output is widely expected to post substantially slower growth in the government’s preliminary estimate of third-quarter GDP that’s scheduled for release this Thursday (Oct. 29). Exactly how much deceleration we’ll see vs. Q2’s strong 3.9% rise (real seasonally adjusted annual rate) is a matter of some debate. Indeed, the projections vary from tepid expectations that border on stall-speed assumptions up to a moderate pace that’s still worrisome but strong enough to fend off the view that a new recession is near.
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Initial Guidance | 27 October 2015
● US new home sales fall in Sep, close to 1-yr low | Reuters
● Dallas Fed Index: mfg activity revives as gen’l index stays negative | 24/7 Wall St
● US warship sails through disputed waters in South China Sea | CNN
● Fed debates at center of policy focus this week | Bloomberg
● White House & Congress reach budget deal | WaPo
US Stock Market Regained The Lead In Last Week’s Rally
US stocks reclaimed the top spot in last week’s performance race for the major assets classes, based on a set of proxy ETFs. The Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF (VTI) gained 1.7% for the five trading days through Oct. 23, the fourth straight weekly rise—the longest winning streak in a year. Otherwise, the week just passed was mixed for the major asset classes, with broadly defined commodities—iPath Bloomberg Commodity (DJP)—leading the losers with a 2.7% loss—the biggest weekly slide since August.
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Initial Guidance | 26 October 2015
● US Manufacturing PMI rises to 5-month high in Oct | MarketWatch
● Ifo business climate data for Germany edges up in Oct | Ifo
● China cuts policy rate–a warning sign for global economy? | The Guardian
● Japan still struggling after years of monetary stimulus | NY Times
● Russia’s operations near US undersea cables looks suspicious | Reuters
● ECB’s Draghi looking for clues this week about stimulus plan | Bloomberg
Book Bits | 24 October 2015
● America’s Bank: The Epic Struggle to Create the Federal Reserve
By Roger Lowenstein
Essay by author via The Wall Street Journal
Antipathy to the central bank is a uniquely American tradition. No federal agency, except the Internal Revenue Service, is held in lower regard than the Federal Reserve, according to public opinion surveys. The left accuses the Fed of being too cozy with banks; the right says it is planting the seeds of a massive inflation.
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US Manufacturing PMI Rebounds To 5-Month High In October
Has the recent slowdown in US manufacturing run its course? That’s the implication in today’s flash estimate of Markit’s purchasing managers’ index (PMI), which increased by to 54.0 in October from 53.1 in the previous month—a five-month high that puts more distance between current activity and the neutral 50.0 mark. It’s still too early to break out the champagne or assume that the US economy is set to roar in the months ahead. But today’s release suggests that the manufacturing sector in the world’s biggest economy will continue to post moderate growth after a bout of deceleration.
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Mr. Market’s Outlook Rebounds. Can We Believe It?
After a rough two months that witnessed a sharp decline in equity prices in the US, the stock market has recovered most of the losses since China announced a surprise currency devaluation on Aug. 11—an event that triggered a selling wave of risky assets around the world. It’s debatable if the worst is over. But from the vantage of the US equities, the outlook is considerably less threatening compared with the dark days from late-August through September’s close. The question is whether Mr. Market’s spiritual revival of late is a reliable indication of better days ahead vs. noise that’s distracting us from recognizing that a deteriorating trend is still underway?
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Initial Guidance | 23 October 2015
● Conference Board’s US Leading Economic Index dips in September | WSJ
● US jobless claims inch higher but remain near multi-decade low | MarketWatch
● US growth below average in September | Chicago Fed
● US existing home sales rise in Sep, near 8-year high | Bloomberg
● US consumer expectations weaken in Bloomberg survey | Bloomberg
● ECB signals more stimulus for Eurozone in December | The Economist
● Eurozone Composite PMI ticks up to 2-mo high in Oct | Markit