US economic growth is projected to post a moderate rebound in the second quarter, based on The Capital Spectator’s average estimate for several econometric-based forecasts. GDP is on track to rise 1.7% (seasonally adjusted annual rate) in the “advance” Q2 report scheduled for release on July 30 via the Bureau of Economic Analysis. The average forecast is a relatively sluggish rate, although today’s revised outlook marks a revival after Q1’s 0.7% slump.
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Initial Guidance | 23 June 2015
● Chicago Fed Nat’l Activity Index: Growth Still Stunted in May | Morningstar
● US Existing-Home Sales Increase 5.1% in May | WSJ
● Eurozone flash consumer confidence indicator stable in June | EC
● Flash Eurozone PMI hits four-year high in June | Markit
● German PMI: output increases at stronger rate, new order growth slows | Markit
● China Manufacturing Sector Continues To Shrink – HSBC | RTT
Modeling “Safe” Spending Rates For Retirement Portfolios
Deaccumulation is the new new thing in finance for an obvious reason: the US population is aging, which means that retirement becomes an increasingly pressing issue for financial planning. Perhaps the leading challenge for this critical task (other than accumulating a sufficient pot of money) is managing the withdrawals from a retirement portfolio. The task is a delicate balancing act of maximizing deaccumlation in the short term (over a one-year period, for instance) without running out of money before a retiree shuffles off this mortal coil. An absolute solution will always remain elusive due to the standard issues that bedevil finance, but some basic modeling applications can wrestle the uncertainty down to a comparatively tame beast.
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Initial Guidance | 22 June 2015
● US economy shows signs of heating up — but not sizzling | MarketWatch
● US business inflation expectations virtually unchanged at 1.9% | Atlanta Fed
● While Everyone Is Watching the Fed, the Economy Slips | Morningstar
● Mood brightens after latest Greek offer to creditors | Reuters
● EU Moscovici: Latest Greek Proposals Could Be Basis for Accord | MNI
Chicago Fed Nat’l Activity Index: May 2015 Preview
The three-month average of the Chicago Fed National Activity Index (CFNAI) is expected to slip fractionally, falling slightly deeper into negative territory in the May update that’s scheduled for tomorrow (May 22), based on The Capital Spectator’s average point forecast for several econometric estimates. The projection for -0.24 is a touch below the -0.23 reading for April, which reflects a below-average pace of economic growth for the US relative to the historical trend. Only negative values below -0.70 indicate an “increasing likelihood” that a recession has started, according to guidelines from the Chicago Fed. Using today’s estimate for May as a guide, CFNAI’s three-month average is expected to remain at a rate of growth that’s below the historical trend but still well above the tipping point that marks the start of a new recession.
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Book Bits | 20 June 2015
● The Mythology of Work: How Capitalism Persists Despite Itself
By Peter Fleming
Essay by author via The Guardian
It is clear that the relationship between jobs and pay is now governed by a new principle. The old days in which your pay was linked to the number of hours you clocked up, the skill required and the societal worth of the job are long over. Other factors play a bigger role in determining how much you are rewarded today. This is why we live in a world where the task of walking a millionaire’s dog through Hyde Park is considered more valuable than an NHS nurse (starting salary £21k).
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Jobless Claims Continue To Forecast A Healthy Rise In US Payrolls
The outlook for the US economy has hit a rough patch lately, according to some indicators, but you wouldn’t know it from the weekly updates on jobless claims. This leading indicator continues to paint an upbeat profile for the labor market, which suggests that whatever’s weighing on the broad macro trend will soon fade.
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Initial Guidance | 19 June 2015
● Jobless claims fall to nearly 15-year low | USA Today
● US leading economic index rose 0.7% in May | MarketWatch
● Inflation Genie Slow to Emerge, Affirming Fed’s Gradual Path | Bloomberg
● Consumer Comfort in US Climbs After Falling Record 9 Weeks | Bloomberg
● Philly Fed Index Jumps To Six-Month High In June | RTT
● What happens next if Greece defaults on IMF? | Reuters
Rate Hikes Without Supporting Data?
The Federal Reserve is talking about raising interest rates, but it’s also lowering growth expectations. No wonder the market’s uninspired to do much of anything at the moment. The benchmark 10-year yield was unchanged yesterday at 2.32%, based on Treasury.gov data. That’s still moderately elevated vs. the below-2% levels at various points in recent months. But the current rate is also below the 2.50% yield we saw earlier this month. For now, the upside bias is on hold.
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Initial Guidance | 18 June 2015
● Fed signals it’s on track for September rate hike | USA Today
● Fed holds off on interest rate hike, downgrades economic forecast | LA Times
● Mortgage applications drop 5.5% on rising interest rates | HW
● Eurozone return to inflation confirmed as energy impact wanes | Reuters
● U.K. Retail Sales Rise Unexpectedly In May | RTT
● Investors brace for more volatility as Greece eyes default | CNBC