The Bank of Canada today announced that it was raising its overnight lending rate by 25 basis points to 50 basis points. The doubling of the price of money is the first hike in North American by a central bank since the Great Recession ended.
THE MAULING IN MAY
May was the worst month for the major asset classes since the dark days of February 2009. Virtually everything suffered with more than trivial losses. Treasuries were the exception, thanks to the revived rush to safety. In turn, that helped prop up broad investment-grade bond indices. Otherwise, the red ink last month is a sign that the big, easy gains in everything is over.
SATURDAY LINK LIST: 5.29.2010
Consumer spending was flat last month, even though income was up in April. A sign of things to come? A sampling of reaction from the punditocracy…
APRIL INCOME RISES WHILE CONSUMER SPENDING IS FLAT
This morning’s update on personal spending and income for April raises as many questions as it answers.
SHOULD WE WORRY ABOUT A 90% DEBT/GDP RATIO?
Paul Krugman questions the central finding in a new Reinhart-Rogoff research paper that focuses on the apparent linkage between government debt and economic growth. The study (“Growth in a Time of Debt”) has been cited in the discussions in Washington re: the budget deficit, as The Hill reported here. The central point in the paper: when debt rises to 90% of GDP, growth “deteriorates markedly,” according to Carmen Reinhart, an economist at the University of Maryland and co-author of the paper. Krugman isn’t so sure. “It’s based on a crude correlation,” he charges, “and as soon as you look at specific examples, it starts to look all wrong.”
MORE CHATTER ABOUT DEFLATION…
The pundits are buzzing about the rapid decline in the money supply of late. The latest catalyst for the chatter is a story yesterday in the Telegraph, which ran this provocative headline: “US money supply plunges at 1930s pace as Obama eyes fresh stimulus.”
IS THE REBOUND IN DURABLE GOODS STILL DURABLE?
Today’s update on new orders for durable goods is just the thing to blow away the deflation blues that have been poisoning the party over the past few weeks. Spending was up in April for this leading indicator. Actually, that’s no surprise. We already knew that last month was loaded with encouraging reports. Industrial production and retail sales, for instance, jumped last month. And job growth in April was the strongest in four years. But it’s May that suffered a change in sentiment in the markets. Figuring out if it’s just a temporary blip, or something more ominous that will show up in the economic indicators will take time. Unfortunately, April numbers won’t help figure out what’s what, even if they look good.
WHAT’S IN A NAME?
The Great Recession is over, but the Great Recovery isn’t quite here. That’s no surprise. We’ve been expecting a rather lengthy transition that’s betwixt and between for some time. A year ago we opined that “the recovery period, whenever it commences, will be unusually slow and sluggish.” We’ve reiterated the forecast a number of times. Perhaps future economic data will prove otherwise, although for the moment there’s no shortage of like-minded thinkers.
PONDERING A FUTURE OF DEBT
Everyone knows that the U.S., and most of the mature economies around the world, are swimming in a sea of red ink. The great unknown is the degree and form of the blowback. The optimistic view is that the pain will be relatively mild and that the recovery in the world economy will help nations grow their way out of the problem. But what if growth isn’t sufficiently strong or durable? In that case, the future may be quite a bit less rosy than the optimists predict.
GROWTH? PROBABLY, BUT IT WON’T BE EASY
The 12-month-old U.S. economic recovery is in “good shape,” a new survey of economists advises. The National Association for Business Economists reports that 46 panelists of macroeconomic forecasters “marked up their predictions for economic growth in 2010 and expect performance to exceed its long-term trend this year and next,” according to a press release published by NABE today. The upbeat view comes at a time when the deflationary risks appear to be rising, if only slightly, as we discussed last week (here and here). The great struggle between growth vs. contraction in the post-recession period has begun. Expansion still has the upper hand, but the minions of decline aren’t going to fade away quietly.