● German 2014 Trade Surplus At Record High | RTT
● Germany Posting Record Surplus Gives Fodder to Economy’s Critics | Bloomberg
● Now’s not the time to raise US interest rates | WaPo
● Euro zone sentiment improves sharply in Feb on ECB bond-buying | Reuters
● China’s Exports Post Surprise Drop in January | WSJ
● Get ready for Greece to leave euro, says Greenspan | Telegraph
● Bank of England set to make its first deflation forecast | The Times
Book Bits | 7 February 2015
● Climate Shock: The Economic Consequences of a Hotter Planet
By Gernot Wagner & Martin L. Weitzman
Summary via publisher (Princeton University Press)
If you had a 10 percent chance of having a fatal car accident, you’d take necessary precautions. If your finances had a 10 percent chance of suffering a severe loss, you’d reevaluate your assets. So if we know the world is warming and there’s a 10 percent chance this might eventually lead to a catastrophe beyond anything we could imagine, why aren’t we doing more about climate change right now? We insure our lives against an uncertain future–why not our planet?
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US Private Payrolls Post Another Solid Gain For January
The US labor market added 267,000 jobs in the private sector last month, the government reports–quite a bit more than the consensus forecast was looking for. The Labor Department also revised the data for recent history and today’s release shows that growth has been stronger than previously estimated. In addition, the latest figures show that wage growth picked up. Bottom line: the news is quite bullish, building on recent strength and, in the process, boosting the odds that the Federal Reserve will start raising interest rates in the near term, perhaps as early as June, according to some forecasts.
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Will The Fed Start Raising Interest Rates Later This Year?
Warren Buffett has his doubts, and so do plenty of other analysts. Weak economic activity overseas is arguably a factor that could delay the onset of US tightening. Based on the domestic trend, however, the case for raising rates soon is compelling, according to Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester, who said earlier this week that “if incoming economic information supports my forecast, I would be comfortable with liftoff in the first half of this year.”
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Initial Guidance | 6 February 2015
● Ukraine crisis: Hollande and Merkel set for Putin talks | BBC
● EU forecasts higher growth amid brief deflation | DW
● US trade deficit widens; weekly jobless claims up modestly | Reuters
● US Consumer Comfort Index Declines From Highest Level Since 2007 | Bloomberg
● German Industrial Output Rises as Economy Recovers | Bloomberg
● Spain Industrial Output Falls Unexpectedly In December | RTT
US Nonfarm Private Payrolls: January 2015 Preview
Private nonfarm payrolls in the US are projected to increase by 231,000 (seasonally adjusted) in tomorrow’s January update from the Labor Department, based on The Capital Spectator’s median point forecast for several econometric estimates. The monthly prediction reflects a moderate deceleration in growth vs. December’s 240,000 gain.
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Last Week’s Rise In Jobless Claims Is Good News… Really
US jobless claims climbed 11,000 last week, which is no trivial amount. But this is bullish news. Why? Because the previous week’s extraordinary decline—down 42,000 for the week through Jan. 24 in today’s revision—was only moderately pared back. The thinking last week was that the shortened Martin Luther King holiday skewed the data, which inspired forecasts that today’s number would pop sharply higher in a bout of payback. The consensus forecast called a hefty gain today, with claims projected to rise to 290,000. But as today’s release shows, quite a lot of the recent slide remains intact in today’s report. The news translates to a bullish update for anticipating the near-term outlook for the labor market, starting with tomorrow’s official payrolls report from Washington.
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Global Economy Expands At a Modestly Faster Pace In January
Growth picked up a bit at the start of the new year for the global economy, according to business survey data for January. The JPMorgan Global All-Industry Output Index ticked higher last month, rising to 52.8 from December’s 14-month low of 52.4. (A reading above the neutral 50.0 mark indicates expanding economic activity.) Yes, it’s a mild advance and it hardly marks a sharp reversal from the slowdown that’s been unfolding lately. But the worst fears from some corners of the economic forecasting realm look prematurely dark at the moment.
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Initial Guidance | 5 February 2015
● US Private-sector job growth cooled to 213,000 in January, ADP says | LA Times
● PMI: Stronger US services sector growth in January | Markit
● ECB cancels soft treatment of Greek debt in warning to Athens | Reuters
● Germany Factory Orders Rise Sharply In December, Tops Forecast | RTT
● China cuts bank reserve requirement to spur growth | Reuters
● Buffett: Fed rate hike not feasible | CNBC
ADP: US Private Employment Growth Slows In January
It’s been a rough week for US economic data. With the exception of auto sales, which surged 13% in January, the numbers so far this week have been disappointing. This morning’s January release of the ADP Employment Report is hardly a washout, although it fell short of expectations. Nonetheless, private payrolls continued to expand above the 200,000-per-month mark in January. True, last month’s 213,000 gain is the lowest since last September. What’s more, today’s news follows updates in recent days of a hefty decline in consumer spending in December; a sharp slide in factory orders at 2014’s close; and a slower rate of growth in manufacturing via the ISM Index. It all looks rather worrisome, but it’s too soon to assume the worst.
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