Friday, June 28, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 28, 2024

"The Noah Rule says: "Predicting rain doesn't count, building an ark does." - Warren Buffett

 "In the final chapter of The Intelligent Investor Ben Graham forcefully rejected the dagger thesis: "Confronted with a challenge to distill the secret of sound investment into three words, we venture the motto, Margin of Safety." Forty-two years after reading that, I still think those are the right three words. The failure of investors to heed this simple message caused them staggering losses" - Warren Buffett

It's a summer Friday, I'll keep it brief and I won't write anything on the debate, sorry if that dissappoints....feel free to consult the odds sites https://www.predictit.org/markets/detail/7456/Who-will-win-the-2024-US-presidential-election.   With last night's debate, the first round of the French elections on Sunday and the UK general election on the 4th, elections are certainly front and center.  Today's PCE report and UofM survey will be the highlight.  

Yesterday's 1Q Real GDP was revised up to 1.4% annualized though consumption was weak and prices were higher than consensus forecast expected.  Headline durable goods were better than expected and jobless claims remained benign.  The Atlanta Fed GDP now was revised down to 2.7% for Q2 estimate.  

If you spend all day running your life or business going from one economic data point to another, you might want to take a step back and revisit Ben Graham's secret of sound investment which he distilled into three words: Margin of Safety.

XTOD: My 1 repeated learning in life: "There Are No Adults" Everyone's making it up as they go along. Figure it out yourself, and do it.

XTOD: Incredible work by the Wells Fargo analyst who ordered the same burrito bowl 75 times at eight different Chipotles in NYC to prove the portion size inconsistency

XTOD: The collapse of #walgreens has been unlike anything I've ever seen in big retail.  It's down 24% today and has now lost 80% of its value in under 5 years.     This is America's largest pharmacy chain .. with over 8,500 stores & more than 300,000 employees.  Simply insane.

XTOD: Compounding starts slow and then happens all at once.  Looking for quick results and checking in on your progress constantly can be disheartening.  Be patient with the results, and trust the process.

XTOD: Augie Garrido 5x NCAA national 🏆⚾️coach at Cal State Fullerton & Texas told me in a podcast 15 years ago when I asked him what he knew now he wish he knew early in his career 
he said  “Be loyal to people not institutions or brands, institutions change, you don’t work for an institution. You work for people. When the people change, the institution will too.”

Thursday, June 27, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 27, 2024

 

"You don't realize how easy this game is until you get up in that broadcasting booth." - Mickey Mantle
Financial services loves to provide predictions and when data is slow it appears to be louder.  Like Mickey Mantle quipped, everyone is an expert from the sidelines, willing to provide you with an opinion on the stock market, the direction of yields, the Yen, etc.  As Warren Buffett says: “Paradoxically, when ‘dumb’ money acknowledges its limitations, it ceases to be dumb.” Not everyone gets to that point of acknowledgment.

It will be interesting to see in hindsight who the dumb money is that doesn’t yet realize it’s dumb, the firm that’s been playing poker for an hour and hasn’t figured out the fact that if they can’t figure out who the patsy is at the table it’s them.  The guys who think they’re the smartest guys in the room, but aren’t and just don’t know it yet. Is it the soft landing crowd, the hard landing crowd, the crypto crowd, tech crowd, the CRE crowd, etc.?  Don’t ask me, I acknowledge I’m dumb.

Don't worry the first debate and PCE will give pundits plenty to talk about over the remainder of the week.

Bank stress tests showed everyone passed, while absolute stressed, worst case loss levels increased. In a few days we’ll see banks reaction to these test via what they do what dividend and buyback policies. 
Sales of new homes fell more than expected.  The 5Y note auction was solid, but yields rose on the day.  The 2Y is 4.76% and the 10Y grinded higher and is now 4.34%.   With 2's10's back near 50bps inverted, I'll ask again, is anyone willing to trade a steepener here? One of these years it will work.

The Yen at 36 year weakness against USD sitting 160.59 is certainly not a beneficiary of central bank divergence.  I know some warnings have been issued by the IMF but I'm a little surprised there haven't been a ton of recent articles about how the strength of the USD since 2021 is a potential risk to emerging markets that issued USD-denominated debt. 

On the day ahead it's Q2 GDP (2nd), Durable Goods, Pending Home Sales, Old Guys On TV in primetime.

XTOD: Nate Silver has published his first 2024 election model prediciton…It gives Trump a 66% chance of winning.   In my opinion, Nate is the best mainstream election forecaster in the game. He’s also said many times that he personally does not want Trump to win.

XTOD: An insightful piece by  @mjmauboussin  on Market Concentration. 
"Many investors have a sense that concentration is too high because it has risen sharply from a much lower level. But perhaps we should ask whether concentration was too low before."

XTOD: Dollar strength cannot be stopped right now ... Bloomberg Dollar Index now at its highest since last November

XTOD: The US yield curve continues to confound many: Rather than dis-invert by now as many had expected, the 2s-10s curve is back at its December (more inverted) level of -50 basis points.
What is also notable is the lack of agreement on why this has taken place:
From those interpreting the curve as a warning about a US recession to those dismissing the curve's economic information content.

XTOD: Tiny, repeatable choices compound as days turn to weeks, weeks to months, and months to years.   Working out tomorrow won't change your physique much, but working out every day for the next year will increase your chances of staying in shape.


Wednesday, June 26, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 26, 2024

 "People have always had this craving to have someone tell them the future. Long ago, kings would hire people to read sheep guts. There's always been a market for people who pretend to know the future. Listening to today's forecasters is just as crazy as when the king hired the guy to look at the sheep guts. It happens over and over and over." - Charlie Munger at the 2004 Berkshire Hathaway Shareholder Meeting

I don't know if this qualifies as a prediction of the future, but perhaps Nobel Prize winners will know the future, at least according to a Biden campaign spokesperson citing a letter written by 16 economist arguing that a Trump presindency will reignite inflation: Top economists, Nobel Prize winners, and business leaders all know America can’t afford Trump’s dangerous economic agenda.”   The word "know" there seems pretty strong.  

On a related note, in my observation, it is interesting that many American's believe that the political party they oppose is sure to create more inflation, but collectively many American's and most economist seem to believe inflation is falling and likely to continue to fall.  Can it really be true that survey's about inflation show that people believe inflation is well anchored and not likely to rise in the short and long-run, while at the same time, irrespective of the next President something like 50% of the population will also believe that inflation will rise because of the party running the country?  The reality is likely that neither party has any current concept of fiscal responsibility.  Maybe Fed Gov. Bowman is right to believe that rate cuts shouldn't be in the cards for 2024 citing fiscal stimulus in her risk of concerns yesterday.  

And maybe Ray Dalio is right to be concerned about this crazy political divide when he writes: "we are probably headed toward an existential battle of the hard right against the hard left in which you will have to pick a side and fight for it, or keep your head down, or flee. By flee, I think that will mostly be from one state to another and we will see increased emphasis on state rights rather than the central government being dominant."  Dalio cites that the U.S. is in the midst of late-cycle debt dynamics leading to civil conflicts, in a very long piece he wrote for TIME and published on LinkedIn.  In fairness I didn't read his entire piece yet, but the gist is debt and wealth inequality are precursors for potentially terrible conflicts.

In the markets yesterday it was pretty boring, some rising home prices and Canadian inflation rising for the first time in 5 months, dashing further rate cut hopes some.   Yields are 4.71% on the 2Y and 4.25% on the 10Y.   On the day ahead it's sales of new homes and the 5Y Auction.

XTOD: Until broad assets stop rallying I will never get to recession island. Tacking back and forth with powerful offshore breezes making for no progress.  As assets continue to rally there remains a small chance that our ship will be blown off course completely and arrive back on H4L island 
@DannyDayan5  is there waiting for a hike.

XTOD: Based on my study of history, I believe there are now and have always been five big, interrelated forces that drive how domestic and world orders change.  
The following article https://linkedin.com/pulse/pick-side-fight-keep-your-head-down-flee-ray-dalio-53fpe/?published=t, which appears on @TIME , focuses on why I believe we are approaching the point in the internal order-disorder cycle when you will have to choose between picking a side and fighting for it, keeping your head down, or fleeing.   Please leave any thoughts or feedback you have in the replies.

XTOD: Wow. TSA throughput reached 2.996 million people on Sunday ... a new high

XTOD: Stop saying yes automatically, without thinking!  The point is not to say no to all requests. 
The point is to say NO to the nonessentials so we can say YES to the things that really matter!

XTOD: “Open your mind to what I shall disclose, and hold it fast within you; he who hears, but does not hold what he has heard, learns nothing.”        — Dante Alighieri, Paradisio, Canto V


Tuesday, June 25, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 25, 2024

Rough day for Nasdaq with Nvidia sliding again.  Treasuries did little as markets await PCE later in the week and lacked any other real catalyst.  In Fedspeak both Goolsbee and Daly were fairly dovish focusing on downside risk from keeping policy rates at their current levels, citing weakening consumer spending and some uptick in jobless claims.  For those looking at "weakening" various "surprise indexes" are showing data continuing to miss estimates, or in more economic jargon, various economic surprise indexes are registering their worst levels since 2022.  Let's be honest, data misses vs. analyst consensus estimates are likely as meaningless as data misses vs. the Fed's dot plot.    Speaking of the Fed I've seen a couple of Fed papers recently that seem to continue to downplay how long inflation has been above target (see XTOD for one of them).

The biggest immediate risks to markets is likely elections, with France and UK elections right around the corner.  With France the concern is around deficits and things ultimately becoming something akin to the "Greek Debt Crisis" of the 2010's era. 

The 2Y sits around 4.73% and the 10Y around 4.26% as we head into home price data and more Fedspeak today. 

XTOD: Apollo’s Torsten Slok: “There is a major gap opening up between the mean and the median of long-term inflation expectations, which means that half of the population has long-term inflation expectations that are dramatically higher than the other half.”

XTOD: Money leaving chips for everything else

XTOD: Higher inflation can lead to greater efficiency. It all has to do with the price dispersion that inflation generates, which might motivate some consumers to search for the lowest prices, increasing competition among sellers. https://federalreserve.gov/econres/feds/inflation-price-dispersion-and-welfare-the-role-of-consumer-search.htm #FEDSPaper

XTOD: "In my experience, high-achievers focus a great deal on becoming the person they want to be at work—and far too little on the person they want to be at home."  - Clayton Christiansen

XTOD: I suspect large swathes of people who don’t have kids or who had kids a while ago will have no idea what I’m talking about but youth sports travel teams are killing the American dream!  The current trends in how this works are bad for families, bad for social equality, bad for community, bad for public health, and just overall bad. https://t.co/QAOu3Ld0Ue

XTOD: In order to apply most of your energy in one direction, you have to say no to things that a lot of other people say yes to.   Most successful people are masters at eliminating the unnecessary from their lives.

Monday, June 24, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 24, 2024

What'd I miss?  Nevermind, I'll ask AI.  With the Presidential Debate this Thursday, I'm actually surprised I haven't seen anyone use AI to simulate the debate yet (I'm sure someone has).  I know PCE is on the docket for the week ahead and I'm confident inflation will come up at the debate.

I need to keep a better list of macro topics so I can more easily forget about them and then remember them in a few months when people care about them again.  Oh wait, I do that with this blog.  One day, 25 years from now, I will have my AI and Robot assistant and the Terminator, all jointly, publish this blog under the title "the definitive guide to financial history." (yes in lowercase, to deemphasize the importance of everything documented).

Just for fun, here's a list (likely much abbreviated of the current/oft repeated macro topics):  AI, China, Geopolitics, Trade/Tarrifs, Elections, Wars, Climate, Inflation, Deficits, Crypto......at the core of how many of these "macro" topics does the saying "history doesn't repeat, but human nature does" apply?

On the week ahead PCE, Fedspeak, Debates
Monday: Fedspeak (Waller overnight)
Tuesday: Home prices, consumer confidence
Wednesday: New home sales
Thursday: Q2 GDP (2nd), Durable Goods, Pending Home Sales, Old Guys On TV in primetime
Friday: Personal Income and Spending, PCE

XTOD: When Keynes wrote “The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money” the unemployment rate was around 20%   The unemployment rate in the US today is 4%. 
We don’t need more make-work job programs.

XTOD: For me, crypto has always been a means to an end. Crypto is the vehicle for accelerating the velocity of capital formation and allocation to effectuate all the positive change we want to see in the world. Advanced manufacturing. Small Modular Reactors. Bio-computing. Breakthroughs in Neuroscience. Photonics. 

XTOD: Michael Dell explains “AI”:  “Its going to notify you of emails and important calendar events.”
HOLY SHIT!   A top computer manufacturer can’t provide a single practical example of “AI”.

XTOD: "You only have to do a very few things right in your life so long as you don't do too many things wrong."🎯   Warren Buffett

XTOD: What did  @TheSeesEO  learn from Charlie Munger?   "Simplicity."

XTOD: One of the odder historical facts I can think of is that Reggie Jackson and Benjamin Netanyahu went to high school together

XTOD: You: Grinding 70 hours a week on Excel spreadsheets and getting a pitiful 1% match on your 401k to make $120k a year.   Hawk Tuah Girl: Goes nuclear on the timeline and sells marked-up trucker hats for $120k in one day.


Friday, June 21, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 21, 2024

"Meaning is not something you stumble across, like the answer to a riddle or the prize in a treasure hunt. Meaning is something you build into your life. You build it out of your own past, out of your affections and loyalties, out of the experience of humankind as it is passed on to you, out of your own talent and understanding, out of the things you believe in, out of the things and people you love, out of the values for which you are willing to sacrifice something. The ingredients are there. You are the only one who can put them together into that unique pattern that will be your life. Let it be a life that has dignity and meaning for you. If it does, then the particular balance of success or failure is of less account. "  - John Gardner, "The Road to Self Renewal"

Thursday, June 20, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 20, 2024

 "Achievers are a socially acceptable form of violent men, overdoing it in one way or another.  Their casualties tend to be their marriages, their families and their their health." - John Eldredge

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 19, 2024

                  " If you find serenity and happiness, there may be jealousy;

                                                     be happy anyway.

The good you do today, people will often forget tomorrow;

do good anyway.

Give the world the best you have, and it may never be enough;

give the world the best you’ve got anyway.

You see, in the final analysis, it is between you and God;

                                it was never between you and them anyway." 

 - Mother Teresa, Do It Anyway (excerpt) 

 

Tuesday, June 18, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 18, 2024

 "..you are 100 percent responsible for your life. You alone are responsible for the choices you make and the actions you take.  That said, you must also realize your choices, behaviors, and habits are influenced by very powerful external forces...Everyone is affected by three kinds of influences: input (what you feed your mind), associations (the people you spend time with) and environment (your surroundings)."  - Darren Hardy, The Compound Effect

Monday, June 17, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 17, 2024

The week ahead features more central bank meetings including Australia and the BoE.  Stateside retail sales and PMI's will be the highlights along with Fedspeak.  But we're overdue for a week of cutting out the noise. So as is done periodically we'll do just do a quote a day for the week.

"A good leader never becomes an obstacle or rival. She empathizes with those she leads and points the way toward a good that transcends their relationship - shifting the center of gravity away from herself."  - Luke Burgis, Wanting 

Friday, June 14, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 14, 2024

It's a summer Friday, two days past the most important Wednesday of your career, why are you reading this?

Yesterday saw headline PPI post a decline of 0.2% MoM with core PPI flat MoM, both lower than expected.  Jobless claims rose more than expected, but remain low.  Many market participants believe the recent inflation data rules out the chance of a rate hike from here.

The 30Y Treasury auction was referred to as "stellar" as it priced 1.5bps inside when-issued. Is it falling inflation, falling growth expectations, both that helped bolster demand?  In any event today's supply didn't look like an issue.

If you guessed all-time highs on equities you were right.  

On the day head it's UofM sentiment as the highlight.

XTOD: Private equity is coming to college athletics.  As detailed in this article, the Big 12 is considering an equity investment of up to $1 billion for 20% of the conference.  Another example demonstrating that college athletes are professional athletes.  https://cbssports.com/college-football/news/big-12-considering-private-equity-investment-of-up-to-1-billion-for-as-much-as-20-of-conference/

XTOD: Private equity is going to blow up the world.

XTOD: The question for private credit is how much continued growth depends on expanding:
- retail access  - redeem-ability  - secondary market liquidity - leverage (!!) 
By all accounts, all these features are becoming more common. The asset class quickly starts looking a lot different.  Leverage is the key because it’s the only way outsize relative growth can continue. You can’t somehow recreate the 15x levered banking system on 1x leverage.


Thursday, June 13, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 13, 2024

It was the most important Wednesday in history I believe.  And I learned why I should be gravely concerned about electric boats and sharks, perhaps later than others, but educating myself nonetheless.

The cooler than expected CPI data lead to a double-digit move lower in yields and of course sent stocks to new highs.  Both moves were mostly sustained through the FOMC despite the ‘hawkish’ dot plot.

 The composition of the CPI report may not have been as promising as people think with most of the cooling coming from categories that might be considered less stable like a big reduction in airfare.  

The FOMC held rates as expected, you’ve already read 100 recaps, but you haven’t read my recap here.
And speaking of questions, why does no one ask about FAIT? If we’re targeting average inflation, doesn’t that mean we need inflation to be below 2% after being above 2% to average 2%, because like math?  Who knows.  And why did no one ask Powell to weigh in on the risk of electric boats, it would have been entertaining: “Do I stay on top of the boat and get electrocuted, or do I jump over by the shark and not get electrocuted?”  That seems like a good segue way into a discussion about the balance of risk.

I would tell you what’s on tap for Thursday, but how will it ever compare to Wednesday?  But sure, PPI and 30y auction is exciting stuff.

XTOD: Perfect time to start cutting rates https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GP4QjJ7W4AAeqgR?format=png&name=900x900

XTOD: Hawkish dot plots. Only 1 cut, AND revising up neutral rate (still low IMO) and longer term unemployment rate.

XTOD: Powell's implication remains that Fed policy can control inflation or growth just because it's part of the Fed's dual mandate. In reality, the Fed can't control geopolitics, trade wars, international development strategies, commodity sourcing or distribution costs, rents, debt-based purchasing, skyrocketing rents, the price of gold, cocoa, or a host of variables that can and will influence any randomly set target inflation rate.  
The Fed's policy hasn't kept the markets from booming either. However, it has fueled the distortion between financial assets and the real economy. #permanentdistortion

XTOD: Finally a pleasant surprise. Core CPI was 0.16% in May (2.0% annual rate). Headline was 0.01%. These are the best monthly readings since 8/21 & 7/22 respectively.  Good news but caution: just 1 print & some fluky items.  Core annual rate for 1/3/6/12 months:  2.0/3.3/3.7/3.4

XTOD: NEW: 2nd-grade teacher who was arrested for being drunk in class is no longer facing charges because "it is not illegal to teach drunk."  I love America. 
Wendy Munson was arrested after teaching her students at Nuestro Elementary School in California while drunk.  Munson failed a sobriety test and was twice the legal limit two hours after she was initially arrested.  District Attorney Jennifer Dupre announced that they didn't find any charges, noting that "it is not illegal to teach drunk."  "While the District Attorney’s Office agrees that it is highly inappropriate to teach while intoxicated, it is, unfortunately, not illegal."  "We couldn’t prove that her intoxication would endanger [the kids]."  Munson is not listed as a teacher on the school's website, indicating she was fired.

XTOD: "There’s no way to create a long-term, enjoyable, sustainable life by having a series of short-term transactional relationships that you move your life through. That’s where you end up with these people who can buy anything, who’ve made hundreds of millions, if not billions, of dollars, who are miserable. I’ve met these people. They have their IRR (internal rate of return) etched on their tombstone.   No one gives a shit. No one cares."

Wednesday, June 12, 2024

FOMC Recap: I've got 21 Questions Behind the Questions at the FOMC Press Conference

 


  • FOMC held policy rates at 5.25% to 5.50% as expected
  • FOMC statement characterized progress towards reaching the 2% target as "modest further progress" while continuing to characterize growth as "strong" and unemployment as "low"
  • The SEP (Dots) Median dot showed 1 hike projected for remainder of 2024 vs. 3 in the March Dots
  • The median longer run neutral rate was also raised to 2.8% up from 2.6%.
We spend a lot of time thinking about the FOMC statement and press conference, but do we really pay much attention to the questions the reporters in the room ask?  We know the questions are generally tame, perhaps you remember what happened to Pedro Da Costa when he asked Yellen a tough question back in 2017.  You also know Powell's answers are generally all non-answers.  So does anyone actually pay attention to the press conference?

Well today we are going to focus on the questions and try to get to the questions behind the questions.  Please note that the "Actual Question(s)" are paraphrased from reporter questions during the press conference.
  1. Actual Question: Walk me through the average inflation forecast of 2.8% by year end, it's already 2.75% and forecasted to be lower, do you expect inflation to get worse?
    Question behind the Question:  How do you guys actually come up with your forecast / what are you smoking?

  2. Actual Question: If you have this wrong and inflation is rising is the outlook for rates wrong?
    Question behind the Question:  Are you going to pull a Lagarde and cut rates while rising inflation forecast?

  3. Actual Question: Would more inflation readings like today make a September cut possible?
    Question behind the question: You say you're data dependent, so can you please just tell us what the data needs to show you so you are willing to cut rates?

  4. Actual Question: Did anyone change their projections after the inflation data today?
    Question behind the question: If there is no consistency with how people make their projections, do these dots mean anything?

  5. Actual Question:  How do you view the labor market and how it gets us back to 2%?
    Question behind the question:  Do you still think 'there will be pain' to get inflation back to 2%?

  6. Actual Question: How do you interpret the differences in labor market survey data?
    Question behind the question:  It looks like these surveys are a shit show, can we even rely on the jobs data?

  7. Actual Question: Why did the committee shift down their rate cut forecast?
    Question behind the question: You say you're data dependent, if the data is moving your way, why are you moving the other way?

  8. Actual Question: How should we interpret the rise in the long-run neutral forecast?
    Question behind the question:  You guys have no clue about r-star, right?

  9. Actual Question: Should we conclude that you guys realized you haven't been as restrictive as you think you are?
    Question behind the question: Again, do you guys have any clue as to whether your policy is actually restrictive?

  10. Actual Question: If policy is restrictive why does growth and unemployment not change in your forecast?
    Question behind the question: How many times do we have to ask you whether you can explain how your policy works and how you determine these projections?

  11. Actual Question: Your growth forecast sees no slowdown and unemployment isn't worse, and inflation isn't falling, why do you need to cut rates this year?
    Question behind the question: Either your forecast is wrong or the way you describe your policy is working is wrong, which is it?

  12. Actual Question: Is there concern for housing and financial stability in leaving rates where they are?
    Question behind the question: Are you really just planning to cut rates to bail out certain industries?

  13. Actual Question: People are unhappy at the prices at the grocery store, it doesn't seem like there are still a lot of inflationary pressures in the economy, could you tell us more?
    Question behind the question: Can you tell me again why people hate inflation?

  14. Actual Question: Can you give us a sense of what one rate cut would actually do to the economy?
    Question behind the question:  Why are we all here wasting our time talking about one rate cut?

  15. Actual Question: Is there something about what happened in the first half of the year that you think differently about now?
    Question behind the question:  You guys were so wrong to start the year, did you learn anything?

  16. Actual Question: What is your message to American's who see good data, but feel unhappy about the economy?
    Question behind the question: Do you think American's don't understand economic data, or are they right and inflation just sucks that bad?

  17. Actual Question: Borrowing money is expensive, about when will you lower rates?
    Question behind the question:  People liked free money, when can people get back to getting free money?

  18. Actual Question: What data have you found that is encouraging to you?
    Question behind the question:  You said data matters, can you please just tell us what data matters and where it needs to get to for you to be happy?

  19. Actual Question:  Is your conservatism really just concern about stickiness of housing inflation?
    Question behind the question: Why do we use OER in our inflation measures?

  20. Actual Question: The last jobs report showed more people working multiple jobs, people are paying for things on their credit cards, what will cause a breaking point for spending?
    Question behind the question: Do you really believe the economy is doing as well as the data shows, or is it all a facade?

  21. Actual Question: Can you tell me what you look at in the labor market to decide when to cut rates?
    Question behind the question:  My god, I've been sitting in this press conference for almost an hour, will you please just tell us what data matters?

Daily Economic Update: June 12, 2024

The big day is here.  Is CPI > FOMC today?  What will the Dots show (2 cuts vs. 3 in March and rising longer-run neutral rate)?  

Yesterday's NFIB Small Business Optimism Survey showed an increase in optimism, albeit still below average, along with rising uncertainty.  My favorite line from the report was this (underline is mine): "The government’s share of GDP has grown as has government employment, but hiring more IRS agents is not going to improve consumer well-being. Unsustainable debt levels, including the national debt, risk destabilizing events in financial markets. And, the election promises to bring major changes in the tax and regulatory environment, regardless of who wins. All of this presents a very uncertain outlook for small business owners and uncertainty is the enemy of progress."

The 10Y Auction looked strong trading 2bps through where WI was trading on strong foreign demand and with it yields fell on the day.  The 10Y ended at 4.41% and the 2Y at 4.85%.  Stocks hit new record highs...Oracle, Apple...AI.

Anyway, just remember this is the most important Wednesday of your career, don't blow it.  

XTOD: Roger Federer: "In tennis, perfection is impossible... In the 1,526 singles matches I played in my career, I won almost 80% of those matches... Now, I have a question for all of you... what percentage of the POINTS do you think I won in those matches? Only 54%. In other words, even top-ranked tennis players win barely more than half of the points they play. When you lose every second point, on average, you learn not to dwell on every shot"

XTOD: I'm one of the few Biden supporters who *does* think that society should prioritize marriage and kids.  Family is the best technology we have for mass-producing meaningfulness. Without family, most people will be left to seek meaning from bullshit jobs or misguided activism.

XTOD: Was curious about fertility demographics people have been discussing, so pulled some data myself this morning.   Even though I knew it, striking how much of the childbirth change is from age 15-25.  Also didn’t appreciate how much the college education trends might explain some of this

XTOD: Big new annual report on kids shows "decades of lost progress" due learning loss during - and even after - Covid.  Math & reading scores keep falling.  Many kids just simply stopped going to school, with nearly 15 million "chronically absent" even post-Covid in 2022.   This while tens of billions of the 2021 "reopen schools" money still hasn't been spent.   Tough but necessary read.  
Keep in mind that no western nation kept kids out of school nearly as long as we did.  Most not even close.    Tough but necessary read.  We owe so much to making it up to the kids. 
2024 KIDS COUNT Data Book - The Annie E. Casey Foundation

XTOD: JUST IN: Tuttle Capital just filed for a Congressional Trading ETF $NPEL  The ETF will invest in the stocks that sitting members of 🇺🇸 Congress and/or their spouses have reported owning through public disclosure filings - Bloomberg

XTOD: In 1958, a 20-year-old Hunter S. Thompson wrote a letter to a friend with his advice on finding his life purpose.  It is a work of art.  5 brilliant lessons on finding purpose (everyone should read this):....Lesson 5: Live by Design, Not Default  You get one shot. Stop playing games by default. 
You have the power to choose how you live your life. That doesn't mean you will choose, but you always have the power to choose.  Find the Ninth Path. Live life by design, not default. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GPtlA3lbsAI8Bhn?format=jpg&name=small

Tuesday, June 11, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 11, 2024

Elections came into focus with Macron dissolving parliament and calling for snap elections after strong showings by far right candidates in parliamentary elections swept parts of Europe.  The Euro sold off some, but the U.S. is the honey badger don't care economy with equity indexes hit new highs.  Something, something AI, Apple, meme's, you get the gist.

The 3Y auction tailed 1.1bps, but bond yields did little ahead of Wednesday's FOMC.  2Y is 4.89% and 10Y is 4.47%

I think I'm willing to bet that the Hurley decision to stay at UCONN is more important than the FOMC this week.  Maybe that's just a belief that the head coach of 5 guys on the court's policies are more directly transmitted than the guy at the Fed who sets a rate and needs it to transmit through a gigantic and complex economy...and something about long and variable lags probably doesn't work in sports.

In other Fed news, the NY Fed SCE seemed to indicate consumers fell pretty good and are not lowering their inflation expectations, in fact their 5 year inflation expectations increased to 3%. 

On the day ahead it's small biz optimism (the commentary in that report is actually usually solid) and the 10Y auction as highlights.

XTOD: Not encouraging for the Fed: New York Fed 5-year inflation expectations ticked up to 3% from 2.8%.   UMich longer-term inflation expectations have also climbed a bit lately. Probably not enough to make officials freak out, but definitely something that they'll be keeping an eye on. 

XTOD: With these European election results smashing the liberal left, it appears that rampant illegal immigration and inflation are a toxic mix. Get ready for November.

XTOD: $20,000 a box? Spot rates on Asia-Europe ready to eclipse pandemic highs https://splash247.com/?p=207893 

XTOD: Two huge and powerful forces are pushing for further globalization: 
1) A flawed US corporate tax code that encourages offshoring (see US pharma imports)
2) China's domestic economic weakness, which has pushed it rely on exports

XTOD: Don’t mistake burnout for laziness. When people show a steady decline in effort and output, it’s often a sign of exhaustion. They don't need carrots and sticks to motivate them. They need people to demand less of them and provide more support to them.

XTOD: "Wonder is the desire for knowledge." 

Monday, June 10, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 10, 2024

Headline payrolls solidly beats estimates coming in at +272K and showed an increase in average hourly earnings running at 0.4% MoM and 4% YoY. Despite that the unemployment rate creeped higher as the household survey was soft.  As expected seasonal factors and the divergence in the household and establishment surveys offers something for any narrative about the economy you feel like creating.  Yields immediately shot higher following the report but equities held onto a winning week (thanks AI).

We enter this FOMC week with the 2Y at 4.90% and the 10Y at 4.44%.   After pulling rate cut expectations forward to July, following the jobs report, it seems like many analyst are pushing back their expected timing of the first rate cut to September or November.   We'll see what the latest Fed "Dots" show.   Central Bank divergence will remain a buzz word.

It would be worthwhile not to lose focus on elections, wars, world trade, etc. as we can tend to get myopically focused on U.S. data.

On the week ahead Wednesday is the main event with CPI and the FOMC.

Monday: nothing major in data, 3Y Auction
Tuesday: small biz optimism, 10Y Auction
Wednesday:  CPI, FOMC
Thursday: Jobless claims and PPI, 30Y Auction
Friday: Bank of Japan decision (Thursday night) UofM consumer sentiment

XTOD: On June 7, the #GDPNow model nowcast of real GDP growth in Q2 2024 is 3.1%: https://bit.ly/32EYojR #ATLFedResearch  

XTOD: They really are losing the plot on how to manipulate the numbers: not only a crash in full-time workers, but Household Survey was DOWN 408K, vs 272K establishment survey.  
The gap between the two surveys has never been bigger

XTOD: The household survey could be too low. Is designed to measure ratios based on a survey (what fraction of people surveyed unemployed etc.) not to measure levels (what are the total number of people). With immigration levels could be off....Overall, however, past evidence strongly suggests that a Bayesian should place little to no weight on the household survey in estimating employment levels. The payroll survey is much, much better for that purpose.

XTOD: When have you done 'enough'? Just as clients can experience 'lifestyle creep' as earnings increase, so too can advicers experience 'service creep' as their businesses grow… The key is understanding that it's okay  to stop stacking on additional services.

XTOD: To paraphrase both Greg McKeown and Jim Collins: look for single decisions that remove hundreds or thousands of other decisions.  This was one of the most important lessons Jim learned from legendary management theorist Peter Drucker. As Jim recounted on the podcast, “Don’t make a hundred decisions when one will do. . . . Peter believed that you tend to think that you’re making a lot of different decisions. But then, actually, if you kind of strip it away, you can begin to realize that a whole lot of decisions that look like different decisions are really part of the same category of a decision.”  Much like my startup vacation/retirement in 2015, I’m now asking myself across the board: what can I categorically and completely remove, even temporarily, to create space for seeing the bigger picture and finding gems?

XTOD: “Bad times, hard times, this is what people keep saying; but let us live well, and times shall be good. We are the times: Such as we are, such are the times.”         — Saint Augustine of Hippo

Thursday, June 6, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 7, 2024

Jobs Day in ‘merica.  The expectation is for ~+185K headline and unemployment to remain at 3.9%.  There will likely be plenty of commentary around the seasonal factors and the impact of immigration.  Heading into jobs, stocks and bond yields were little changed yesterday.  The 2Y is 4.74% and the 10Y is 4.29%.

The ECB cut by 25bps as expected, citing easing inflation and the strength of monetary policy transmission. All while also stating that inflation likely to remain above target through next year and expressing some concern about wages.  If I had to paraphrase the ECB it would be: we cut despite raising our inflation targets, thanks for asking, but we are central bankers we’re confident in our path ahead….after all our track record of forecasting is stellar.

The SpaceX launch was newsworthy enough or the ECB presser was boring enough that BBG cut way from Lagarde to televise the launch.

In other data nonfarm productivity slowed to 0.2%, unit labor cost slowed to just 4%, the U.S. trade deficit widened and jobless claims rose.

Other than that we're all just doing it wrong, the key to a happy and successful career combining social media post and Gamestop.

XTOD: "Although we were quite coordinated on the way up — and that was really helpful because a big part of inflation was global — you're going to see some divergence on the way down, and that makes sense," top Bank of Canada official Carolyn Rogers told reporters Wednesday. https://axios.com/2024/06/06/rate-cuts-ecb-fed

XTOD: On June 6, the #GDPNow model nowcast of real GDP growth in Q2 2024 is 2.6%: https://bit.ly/32EYojR #ATLFedResearch 

XTOD: Yep.   The strongest argument that the world has not yet split into rival blocks that don't trade is that the autocratic block runs a massive combined surplus, and the democratic block a combined deficit.  that's only possible with cross-block trade

XTOD: LinkedIn CEO: "Pre-pandemic, it was ~2% of all jobs on the platform were remote jobs. If you go back 2.5 years ago, it peaked at 20%, 21% of all jobs on LinkedIn were remote jobs, which is pretty insane to see that jump from 2% to 21% & now that number is back to 8%" 

XTOD: Here's a day in the life of Brunello Cucinelli.  The man behind the multi-billion dollar quiet luxury sensation.  Sprint, rest, focus. And allocate time for distraction.  https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GPYte5pbUAAlpFt?format=jpg&name=medium

Daily Economic Update: June 6, 2024

Stocks again at record highs.  U.S. service sector activity appeared to be quite strong while also showing some easing in pricing pressure, all keeping future rate cuts on the table. And sure, I'll say "AI" just to say it.  For all you know AI writes this blog and this blog obviously contributes to the market cap of all AI stocks.  Yields were down again with the 2Y at 4.73% and the 10Y at 4.29%.

Away from market highs the theme of central bank divergence will likely be one that investors eventually focus on.  The BoC cuts rates by 25bps to 4.75% as expected, while citing upside risk to inflation and today, the ECB is expected to cut rates.  Arguably we've been through many recent cycles where major central banks all were acting in a largely coordinated manner (see Nomi Prins book "Collusion") and now seem to be embarking on a potential period of divergence with the U.S. likely on hold, Japan possibly hiking, and other domestic central banks cutting, as well as some EM banks.  What this might mean for international finance, exchange rates, etc. could be interesting.

That said you can find a perhaps growing chorus of economist calling for the Fed to cut rates soon.  Brad DeLong reviewed some arguments by Paul Krugman in a blog post here. One of the central arguments ends up being related to everyone's favorite r* (r-star).  Ultimately seeming to conclude that interest rate cuts are needed to bring 10Y real yields back closer to 1.5%.  

On the day ahead it's jobless claims, ECB rate decision and people getting ready for Jobs' Day Friday.

XTOD: Let me bust this nonsense once and for all. There is a myth out there that weak data will lead to rate cuts which will lead to a melt-up in equities. That’s not only moronic but also proved to be wrong in every cutting cycle since the 70s. While it’s in character for the market to rise in the months following a hiking pause, it ended on average 23% lower over the 200 days following the first cut.

XTOD: Lots of talk about an economic slowdown, but what exactly is slowing down?  tl:dr, surveys of opinions, not actual or "hard" data.

XTOD: Babe, wake up, new Maboussin paper just dropped.  https://morganstanley.com/im/publication/insights/articles/article_stockmarketconcentration.pdf?1717518526766

XTOD: Over the past 32 trading days, NVDA has gained more than $1 trillion in market cap. To put that into some sort of perspective, the 6-week gain is greater than the total market cap of BRKA, which Warren Buffett has spent 6 decades in building.

XTOD: "stats show that only about 10 percent of elite 10-year-old athletes are still elite at 18. Only eight percent of Nobel Prize winners and world champions were child prodigies. In fact, the only thing that early success guarantees is … early success" (John O'Sullivan)

XTOD: U.S. general predicts war with China in 2025, tells officers to get ready. In the memo sent Friday and obtained by NBC News, Gen. Mike Minihan, head of Air Mobility Command, said, “I hope I am wrong. My gut tells me will fight in 2025.” Air Mobility Command has nearly 50,000 service members and nearly 500 planes and is responsible for transport and refueling.
Minihan said in the memo that because both Taiwan and the U.S. will have presidential elections in 2024, the U.S. will be “distracted,” and Chinese President Xi Jinping will have an opportunity to move on Taiwan. https://nbcnews.com/politics/national-security/us-air-force-general-predicts-war-china-2025-memo-rcna67967 via 
@nbcnews

XTOD: “What is success? It is an inner and indescribable force, resourcefulness, power of vision; a consciousness that I am, by my mere existence, exerting pressure on the movement of life about me. It is my belief in the adaptability of life to my own ends. Fortune and success lie within ourselves. We must hold them firmly—deep within us.” — Thomas Mann

Wednesday, June 5, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 5, 2024

U.S. yields fell for a 5th straight trading day with Job Openings falling to the lowest level since February 2021 and below estimates.  The quits, hiring and layoff rates were all unchanged.  With job openings falling, I'm sure this will spur some renewed focus on Google Searches for the Beveridge Curve.

In other data, Factory orders increased 0.7% which matched estimates.  All in all recent economic data has investors once again betting on rate cuts in 2024.

Today we'll get ADP Employment, Services PMI data and a Bank of Canada rate decision.  The BoC is expected to cut rates from 5% to 4.75% against a weakening inflation and growth picture. So whatever happens in markets or your life today in the words of South Park you can go ahead and "Blame Canada".

Elections remain a focus for markets and FX and will likely continue to be a focus through the summer month.


XTOD: The JOLTS data show that the openings rate, the hiring rate, and the quit rate are all lower today than they were just before the pandemic hit – a time when the entire Treasury curve out to the 10-year note was trading comfortably below a 2% yield.  I’m not budging an inch from my bond-bullish stance.

XTOD: At what point in the market cycle does the CEO of a company begin signing boobs

XTOD: Honestly I could caption this picture all day. I'm not sure I've ever seen a more iconic image capturing the current moment.  https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GPO_f3fXQAAb68k?format=jpg&name=medium

XTOD: How many people can honestly and explicitly articulate their purpose, or mission, on social media?   Is it to gain followers? Sell book? Build a Substack list? What? 
You have to be able to answer the question.   If you have a vague answer, dial it in immediately.  
Otherwise, your purpose there is being dominated by mimesis for you.   Your purpose, quite simply, will be what everyone else's purpose is.   Or the purpose of the person or basket of people you pay the most attention to.   To take an anti-mimetic approach to social media, either 
1) Get off it completely; or   2) Be guided by a very clear purpose. 
Even then, you will have to constantly gird yourself against the mimetic winds—but you will at least have a destination to sail toward.

XTOD: Only once you give yourself permission to stop trying to do it all, to stop saying yes to everyone, can you make your highest contribution towards the things that really matter. #essentialism

Tuesday, June 4, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 4, 2024

Besides a technical glitch that nearly bankrupted Warren Buffett, June started otherwise ok (Dow was down, S&P up).  After all Berkshire Hathaway is no Gamestop, which did better than ok after a Reddit post from 'Roaring Kitty'. 

The ISM manufacturing survey was in contraction, while the employment component jumped above 50 (expansion) with prices paid remaining above 50, but down from last reading.  The 10Y yield fell to under 4.40% and the 2Y fell to 4.82%.

The ATL Fed GDP Now was again revised lower to now 1.8% following today's data.  Remember a week or so ago, rising yields, inflation fears, poor treasury auctions?  Now it's all concerns about slowing growth.

Unless you're interested in Mexico and some comments to make up for the Fed being on blackout, I'd probably skip to XTOD's.

Outside of the U.S., the Mexican Peso weakened ~4% to ~17.70 after election results showed a super majority for the Moderna party, including a landslide victory for Claudia Sheinbaum as President.  Investors expressed concerns about control over the judiciary system, a lack of willingness to thwart cartel activity and about overall public finances.  Per GS Research by Alberto Ramos:

The AMLO administration submitted to Congress in February a large package of broad-reaching bills, many involving constitutional revisions, to reshape key institutions such as the Electoral Institute and the Supreme Court (e.g., election of supreme court judges) and weaken/eliminate autonomous agencies, alongside populist and costly pension and minimum wage proposals. Some bills are perceived as leading to institutional erosion and weakening the current checks and balances; and several are not viewed as market friendly. With full control of the House, and for practical purposes likely the Senate as well, the probability that a significant part of this broad agenda is approved increased significantly. President Lopez Obrador will overlap with the newly elected Congress for a month (September)......a Morena administration and Morena led Congress may ultimately be reluctant to approve the necessary reforms and/or adopt the measures required to attract investment, leverage the near/friendly-shoring opportunity, and keep Mexico on a medium-term fiscally disciplined path...the new administration will be challenged not to encroach on private sector activity and free markets, and to avoid further erosion of institutional quality. 

Mexico's election may prove important for the upcoming U.S. election given topics like immigration, near-shoring, legal disputes over USMCA, and the drug epidemic all looking like prominent U.S. election issues.  Apparently the overlap of U.S. and Mexican presidential elections only happens every 12 years. 

With the Fed on blackout until their 6/13 meeting, how will you fill your time?  You could read Fed papers such as the May 31st "Lessons from Past Monetary Easing Cycles" in which evidence seems to not bode well for a Fed that arguably got a late start fighting inflation and that success or for anyone hoping that success fighting inflation won't result in a recession (it's a pretty long paper).  

Marcus Nunes argues in a blog post related to the paper that there is a fundamental flaw in the Fed research with that flaw centered on a belief that the level of interest rates alone can tell you whether policy is tight (or loose).  Nunes takes the market monetarist view which he discusses as:

"If not interest rates, what can we use to gauge the stance of monetary policy? The market monetarist school, which blossemed after 2009, when Scott Sumner, at the time a professor at Bentley University, began blogging, naming his blog The Money Illusion.

In short, to market monetarists, the best gauge of monetary policy is NGDP growth, not just any growth, but only the growth in excess (or short) of the a stable level growth path. In other words, when NGDP growth takes NGDP above the stable path, monetary policy is said to be expansionary. When NGDP growth takes NGDP below the stable path (which defines a state of nominal stability), monetary policy is said to be contractionary.

How, then, does the Fed determine NGDP growth? From the equation of exhange in growth form: m+v=p+y, where m is money supply growth, v is velocity growth, p is inflation and y is real output, m is the “thermostat”, the “dial” closely controled by the Fed, that strives to offset changes in the “outside temperature” (v) in order to keep the “inside temperature” (p+y=NGDP growth) stable."

Nunes ultimately concludes that NGDP is now stabilizing and policy is now tightening, which leads one to conclude that Nunes believes the Fed is risking overtightening.

Of course one of these days I'll get around to writing more about everything John Cochrane has recently blogged, but for now, I'll whet your appetite (whet vs. wet is a tricky one) with this from one of his many somewhat recent post in part of a section of models showing what the central bank can do without fiscal help:

"Higher interest rates lower inflation and output. However, they raise inflation in the long run. A form of “unpleasant arithmetic” holds here, and quite generally. The central bank can only move inflation around over time. This is a pretty normal-looking plot. Nobody would notice the slight long-run rise as something else would have happened by then. But the mechanism is utterly different from standard central bank doctrine, that higher rates depress aggregate demand and through a Phillips curve depress inflation."

and: 

"This inflation surge has huge implications for economics and economic policy, which have not been digested yet. For 13 years in the US and EU and 30 in Japan the policy consensus focused on “inadequate demand,” “secular stagnation,” the idea that we just needed more stimulus to get the economy moving. Borrow or print a few trillion dollars of money, they said, spread it around and prosperity will follow. In the same period, with ultra-low interest rates, large deficits, and low inflation, “r<g”, Modern Monetary Theory and other doctrines spread proclaiming that government debt is a free lunch, never needing to be repaid. MMT preached that “there is always slack” in the US economy, so one never need worry about stimulus causing inflation.  Borrow or print a few trillion dollars of money, they said, and don’t worry about paying it back.

Well, in 2021 we did exactly what this consensus asked. And we got inflation. That is an important lesson. There was genuine uncertainty about what would happen, in the 2010s, if a massive fiscal-monetary stimulus were attempted. Now we know. “Demand” bashed in to the brick wall of supply, and surprisingly soon. If you want more economic growth now, there is no alternative but incentives and microeconomic efficiency; growth. If you want to borrow and do not wish to cause inflation, you must have a plan for paying it back. Economics is back to normal. Washington has not woken up to this slap-in-the-face lesson, perhaps because it interrupts such pleasant dreams."

The best we get in data today will be JOLTs.   

XTOD:  Data is asking you, what stage?  - q1 real GDP was revised down to 1.3% q/q ar
- Atlanta Fed GDP Now for q2 was revised lower from 4.2% to 1.8% over last month
- Real consumer spending was negative m/m in April and prior month were revised lower
- A few days ago, BEA revised down q4 wage and salary income quarterly gain by over $ 70 billions 
- Pending Home sales fell 7.7% in April 
- ISM Manufacturing New Orders down to 45.4 in May, lowest in a year. New Orders have been in contraction for almost 2 years running now
- ISM Manufacturing backlogs gauge is down to 42.4 in May, also in contraction for most of last 2 years 

XTOD: American households have:
$32 trillion in home equity 
$6 trillion in money markets
$4 trillion in checking accts
$2-3 trillion in CDs
The piggy banks are full if & when we finally have a slowdown

XTOD: The huge appreciation of the Mexican Peso (red) has been a bubble waiting to burst. Overvaluation is on the order of 20%. Obvious catalyst to burst this bubble is the US election in November, where a Trump win could bring lots of headwinds. This weekend's election is another one.

XTOD: In the next downcycle, if it ever comes, buying LP stakes from illiquid pensions and endowments that are about to default is going to be an insane business.

XTOD: “You could be somewhere where the mail was delayed three weeks and do just fine investing.” 
— Warren Buffett

XTOD: A poem Rockefeller used to recite in the office: 
A wise old owl lived in an oak,
The more he saw the less he spoke,
The less he spoke, the more he heard,
Why aren’t we all like that old bird?

Monday, June 3, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 3, 2024

Equities liked that Friday's PCE was in line with expectations, giving some relief to investors that inflation wasn't re-accelerating.  Core PCE was 0.25% MoM and 2.75% YoY.  Headline PCE was 0.26% MoM and 2.65% YoY.  The report also showed weak spending with real spending falling.  The 2Y is 4.88% and the 10Y at 4.50% to start the month.

The ATL Fed GDPNow released on Friday downgraded 2QGDP estimates to 2.7% from 3.5% and the NY Fed nowcast moved to 1.76% from 2.04%, both reports cited weaker than expected consumption data as the driver.

Over the weekend OPEC+ extended cuts through 2025.  Per Reuters: On Sunday, OPEC+ agreed to extend the cuts of 3.66 million bpd by a year until the end of 2025 and prolong the cuts of 2.2 million bpd by three months until the end of September 2024. OPEC+ will gradually phase out the cuts of 2.2 million bpd over the course of a year from October 2024 to September 2025.

On the week ahead it will be all about Jobs data. 
Monday: S&P flash mfg pmi, ISM Mfg
Tuesday: Factory Orders, JOLTS
Wednesday: ADP Employment, ISM Services, S&P flash services pmi
Thursday: Jobless claims
Friday: Jobs Day in 'merica!

If you missed John Cochrane's recent Substack posts regarding inflation, monetary and fiscal policy, today is not the day I summarize them...but maybe one day I will.

XTOD: I accidentally said “debt” instead of “leverage” and my managing director took me into the conference room and slapped me with his Gucci loafer

XTOD: "According to this model, inflation does not fall to near to 2 percent until mid-2027. Taken together, these model-based forecasts indicate notable upside risk to forecasts that see inflation back to 2 percent by spring of next year," says one Cleveland Fed economist. https://clevelandfed.org/publications/economic-commentary/2024/ec-202409-inflations-last-half-mile

XTOD: Astrologers are better at forecasting the future than Economists ... only problem with this is Economists in a position to influence policies pursued based on their inaccurate forecasts ...

XTOD: Core PCE inflation came in above the Fed's target for the 4th straight month. But it moderated from Q1 and the elevation was entirely due to imputed portfolio fees resulting from the strong stock market. 
Annual rates:
1 month: 3.0%
3 months: 3.5%
6 months: 3.2%
12 months: 2.8%

XTOD: What stage?  *PRIVATE CREDIT FIRM NINEPOINT HALTS CASH PAYOUTS ON THREE FUNDS

XTOD: Senior U.S. Officials have reportedly conveyed to the Ukrainian Government that they are Extremely Concerned about Two Attacks recently by the Ukrainian Armed Forces that attempted to Strike at Russian Nuclear Over-the-Horizon Early-Warning Radar Sites along the Southern Border of the Country. With an Attack by Ukrainian One-Way “Suicide” Drones on a Early-Warning Site near the Town of Armavir in the Krasnodar Krai Region, believed to have caused Damage to a Radar System; while another Attack on an Early-Warning Site near the City of Orsk along the Russian Border with Kazakhstan, which is over 1,100 Miles from Ukraine, is believed to have Failed. U.S. Officials state that these Sites have No Involvement with the Russian War in Ukraine and that Attacks on them could Dangerously Unsettle the Russian Government who may see this as an attempt at “Blinding” them to a Western Nuclear Attack.

XTOD: A while back, one of our pro guys told me, "Our training in college was excessive and absurd. Our training in pro ball has been insufficient and absurd."   Development won't happen at extremes. It happens at the sweet spot where work capacity is challenged, but not overwhelmed.

Daily Economic Update: June 6, 2025

Broken Bromance Trump and Xi talk, but Trump and Musk spar.  I don’t know which headline matters more for markets, but shares of Tesla didn’...