"If you are confident you have done everything possible to prepare yourself, then there is nothing to fear. There's no stress in losing under those circumstances. It just wasn't meant to be.” - Michael Jordan
"We think they are days from failure. They think it is a temporary problem. This disconnect is dangerous."
Friday, November 29, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 29, 2024
Thursday, November 28, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 28, 2024
"true power" stems from traits such as honesty, compassion, and a dedication to enhancing other people's lives......"You can't get away with lying to other human's"
- David Hawkins
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 27, 2024
“I don’t know what I would have done. I would have perhaps produced a few things and who knows where I would have went? But if I’d continued to dedicate my life to Bruce Springsteen’s vision I would never have realized my potential. I still haven’t, obviously, but I got a few things done and I think they wouldn’t have gotten done if I’d stayed.”
- Steven Van Zandt [on leaving the E Street Band]
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 26, 2024
"Keeping your organization simple is not simple, but it is very important." Robert Kierlin (The founder of Fastenal)
"the more simple anything is, the less liable it is to be disordered…" - Thomas Paine in Common Sense
Monday, November 25, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 25, 2024
"The great defect of scale, of course, which makes the game interesting—so that the big people don’t always win—is that as you get big, you get the bureaucracy. And with the bureaucracy comes the territoriality—which is again grounded in human nature...And in a bureaucracy, you think the work is done when it goes out of your in-basket into somebody else’s in-basket. But, of course, it isn’t...So you get big, fat, dumb, unmotivated bureaucracies...They also tend to become somewhat corrupt...you get layers of management and associated costs that nobody needs.Then, while people are justifying all these layers, it takes forever to get anything done. They’re too slow to make decisions and nimbler people run circles around them..." - Charlie Munger
Friday, November 22, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 22, 2024
Thursday, November 21, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 21, 2024
- CRE credit remains a risk, specifically office and particularly at smaller banks
- Asset valuations are likely streched and the use of leverage and complex strategies is elevated
- Runs on money-like instruments are always a risk, including risks associated with stablecoins
- The debt ceiling poses risks as do basis trades in the Treasury market
- There are still areas where data is limited, such as Private Credit and other non-bank financial areas that could pose risks
- Technology comes with risks, including cyberattacks
" Equity valuations and investor sentiment are high relative to historical averages, raising the risk of large, sudden price declines. In Treasury markets, the design of the U.S. debt ceiling is a major vulnerability. Exposures to some complex and opaque trading strategies are high"
" The increasing interconnectedness of digital assets with the traditional financial system is an emerging vulnerability."
" The cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings (CAPE) ratio for the S&P 500, for example, is 36 and in the 98th percentile of historical values"
" Trading liquidity in the Treasury market can become stressed in other circumstances as well. One potential source of stress is an abrupt unwinding of the Treasury cash-futures basis trade."
" The spreads on investment-grade and high-yield bonds are low by historical standards"
" about half as many employees are physically working in the office compared with before the COVID-19 pandemic"
" OFR researchers find that while PoS saves energy and provides for greater scalability of a crypto asset, it may be unstable because a significant drop in the crypto asset’s price may cause validators to exit their investments"
" The number of transactions occurring outside of the traditional exchange system, or off-exchange, is substantial"
" Nonfinancial corporate business debt contributed to financial instability at least three times during the past 40 years: 1989-91, 2000- 02, and 2007-09.17 Each episode featured a mix of unusually high borrower default rates and constraints on weaker firms’ ability to issue or renew debt. Often, the two interact and form a debt-default spiral. "
" The price of insurance, where insurance is available, is rising rapidly, especially in areas experiencing adverse climate events." "The researchers estimate that the average homeowner stands to lose approximately $11,000, or 4% of their home value and 34% of their home equity at the time of home purchase if prices change to reflect climate risk"
" The 2024 cyberattack on Change Healthcare (Change) illustrates how a cyber event that disrupts the business sector can transmit stress to the financial system."
" Since the 2023 banking turmoil, banks have increasingly used reciprocal deposits as a tool to expand FDIC insurance coverage and to reduce liquidity risk from runs. Through thirdparty reciprocal deposit network sponsors, such as IntraFi and others, banks swap customer deposits with one another to keep the amount in each account at or below $250,000. This makes it possible for a bank customer to hold tens of millions of dollars in insured accounts with a single relationship bank. "
" Since private lenders are connected to the rest of the financial system through funding arrangements and shared credit exposure, their distress could propagate rapidly. The lack of data about private lenders’ portfolio risk and leverage may obscure or worsen vulnerabilities in the financial system"
" Vulnerabilities associated with stablecoins remain elevated. Issuers of the dominant stablecoins continue to invest a material fraction of their reserves in illiquid or volatile assets. For example, as of June 30, 2024, more than 12% of the assets that support Tether’s value were in Bitcoin, precious metals, and secured loans"
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 20, 2024
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 19, 2024
Monday, November 18, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 18, 2024
It is curious that many economists who bemoan Trump’s tariffs for their inflationary effect also want to raise corporate taxes. Corporate taxes are also passed along to consumers though higher prices. If tariffs raise inflation, so do corporate taxes! And if the revenue from corporate taxes (if there is any, after long-run Laffer effects) lowers inflation, so does the revenue from tariffs.Sales taxes are paid by the seller. Yet everyone understands that sales taxes are passed along entirely to consumers in the form of higher prices. That tariffs work the same way should not be too hard to understand.
We start the week with the ATL Fed GDP estimate for the 4Q at 2.5%, at 10Y at 4.44% and the 2Y at 4.33%.
The Trump pick for Treasury Secretary remains hotly debated in the media and social media, that will possibly be resolved this week.
I was going to summarize the week ahead but El Erian wrote this on X: This week, corporate earnings will attract a lot of attention in the global economy/markets, including Nvidia’s, Target’s, and Walmart’s releases. In a relatively light week for economic data, watch for PMIs, UMich consumer sentiment, and existing home sales; UK inflation, retail sales, and October budgetary gap; and Eurozone PMIs and consumer sentiment. On the central bank front, expect many Fed speakers, the ECB’s financial stability review, and closely watched comments from Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda.
Friday, November 15, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 15, 2024
"Price movements for this index are based on changes in the amount of revenue a mutual fund manager receives for providing investment advice. To track price movement for the index, data on management fees are collected. The management fee is most often based on a percentage of assets under management or a certain number of basis points."
Munger’s “febezzle” occurs when an investment manager earns compensation from the rising value of the assets under management during periods of rising asset prices. In his example, the asset manager receives the “wasted” asset management fees and other stock compensation from the investors as income, making them richer, and the investor, despite paying the asset management fees, also feels richer. Both parties believe they are “virtuously earning income” and can sustain spending from what they believe is income but is in reality spending from a “wealth effect,” which dissipates if asset prices decline. Munger went on to bemoan the impact “febezzle” can have on the misallocation of capital to unproductive projects and foolish spending which cannot support the continued increase in values, the fall of which led to real and long-lasting macroeconomic consequences once the “febezzle” starts to unwind. Munger’s advice: “when the financial scene starts reminding you of Sodom and Gomorrah, you should fear practical consequences even if you like to participate in what is going on.”
Thursday, November 14, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 14, 2024
"But I am paying particular attention to three that, in my view, pose the largest potential challenges for monetary policy in the months ahead.One, unexpectedly strong demand or negative supply shocks could keep inflation above the FOMC’s 2 percent goal. Two, tightening financial conditions could trigger a rapid deterioration in the labor market. Or, three, financial conditions could ease too much if the neutral interest rate, the theoretical level that would neither slow nor accelerate the economy, proves to be higher than expected."
Wednesday, November 13, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 13, 2024
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 12, 2024
Monday, November 11, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 11, 2024
Friday, November 8, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 8, 2024
Thursday, November 7, 2024
FOMC Recap: Got Debt?
- Fed cuts 25bps to 4.50% to 4.75% range as expected
- The statement removed the sentence that the Committee had gained greater confidence that inflation was moving sustainably to 2%.
- "In the near term the election will have no effect on our policy decisions." "We don't guess, we don't speculate, we don't assume what policies will get put into place."
- Powell seemed to characterize the recent run up in bond yields as being driven largely by expectations around growth and decreased risk. He further questioned whether there will be any persistency to the recent yield moves, characterizing the moves as "not a major factor" in how they are thinking about things"
- "We don't comment on fiscal policy" he further characterized the path of fiscal policy as "unsustainable" and a "threat to the economy" over time.
- Powell comments that he will not resign.
" Deborah Lucas was the moderator, and she asked a much more pointed question just right out of the gate when the panel started, and she asked, how much bearing does the fiscal theory of the price level or some version of that have on your thinking at the Fed?"
" if you take this theory seriously, it really undermines the whole point of the Federal Reserve"
The quotes above are from the David Beckworth's most recent episode of Macro Musings, during which he was discussing the Hoover Institution’s recent monetary policy conference, *A 50-Year Retrospective on the Shadow Open Market Committee and its Role in Monetary Policy* with his guest Jon Hartley.
With so much post-election talk about the sustainability of debt, deficits and the like, along with some talk heading into the election around the Fed's independence and the occassional calls to end the Fed, I thought the comments above were interesting to consider. After all if fiscal policy is a major driver of inflation how is the Fed supposed to fulfil their price stability mandate?
Is it an unspoken secret that the macroeconomic models include some budget constraint and some fiscal-monetary coordination. As one of the leading proponents of the Fiscal Theory of the Price Level, John Cochrane would say that the Central Bank can move or smooth inflation over time, but that ultimately they don't have full control: "the Fed’s interest rate target sets expected inflation, fiscal policy sets unexpected inflation." and "the Fed makes a threat: If unexpected inflation doesn’t go where the Fed wants it to go, the Fed will blow up the economy with hyperinflation or hyper deflation. " He also says "If you don’t like my little fiscal theory model, we don’t have a good model of the most basic question, how higher interest rates lower inflation, without a contemporaneous fiscal tightening." and "The news is that without such contemporaneous austerity, higher interest rates don’t lower inflation at all in standard models. Intuitively, if the Fed raises interest rates, that raises interest costs on the debt. Taxes must rise or spending must fall to pay those interest costs. If not, no reduction in inflation."
Which bring me back to my favorite quote about the role of central banks:
"I define central bank independence in one sentence, it's the ability to raise interest rates when the Treasury doesn't want you to. And the Treasury almost never wants you to, because of the cost of the debt.” – Peter Stella
I think my general commentary over the years (and here) has been to remember that there is a lot of economics and finance that we just take for granted as to our understanding as to how it all works. If you’re reading this and are now questioning your worldview of interest rates and FOMC policy — good.
Irrespective of the economic models you believe in, it's undeniable that that they all contain unobservable variables and are difficult to test empiracally.
As for the FOMC today, Powell was well prepared for election related questions, including questions around whether he could legally be fired by the President. He admitted that there are policies that come through Congress can have an impact on economic variables that will ultimately be taken into account.
Listening to the Powell presser, I was left largely with an impression that the FOMC is struggling to communicate what lane they are driving in, they're largely trying to say in the "middle" of the road. It sounds like they originally set a goal in the rate hiking cycle that they would bring inflation back to target, without declaring victory in terms of meeting that goal, they started to drive out of that lane and are now "in the middle".
I'm sure there are some blogs or even self-help books out there about being stuck in the "messy middle". Since I haven't read any of them, for my advice to the Powell Fed, I'll stick closer to my knitting and encourage Powell to listen to the wisdom the late, great Mr. Miyaki of the 1984 movie classic "The Karate Kid" gave to Daniel-san with regards to the risk of only being moderately committed to your goals.
“Walk on road, walk right side, safe. Walk left side, safe. Walk middle, sooner or later, get squish just like grape”
Daily Economic Update: November 7, 2024
Wednesday, November 6, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 6, 2024
Tuesday, November 5, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 5, 2024
"Elections have consequences." - Obama
"I conjecture that if you gave an investor the next day’s news 24 hours in advance, he would go bust in less than a year.” - Taleb
Are you familiar with the "crystal ball trading challenge"? Basically it's an experiment where participants are given the front page of the WSJ in advance and you basically get to trade knowing that information. The result was people did poorly, you can read more here. In a post by Victor Haghani, the conclusion is summarized as:
Most stories involving people seeing into the future... don’t have “happily ever after” endings. There are usually unintended consequences that come with perfect prescience – a reminder that even prophets can’t escape risk and uncertainty. The best we mortals can do is make our decisions with a framework that explicitly accounts for the presence of risk in just about every big choice we face.
Monday, November 4, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 4, 2024
"There are decades where nothing happens; and there are weeks where decades happen"--Vladimir Ilyich Lenin.
"Risk is what you don't see...The biggest news, the biggest risks, the most consequential events are always what you don't see coming. - Morgan Housel
"If you are merely forecasting the most likely outcome over the next year or two you will be most unlikely to hang your spreadsheet on predicting a discontinuity. It’s much more sensible to predict a continuation of current business or to follow guidance. It’s rare for us to know when a dramatic change will occur but frequent for it to be close to inevitable at some point. Certainty is an abject temptation. The world is too complex, too erratic and too full of surprises to make spot forecasts of anything of significance. I’d push this further: trying to be ‘correct’ is the enemy of good investing. It’s much more valuable to have doubt and to make portfolios the beneficiaries of potential Black Swan. Therefore the best we can do is to come up with a set of possibilities and probabilities, endeavour to make them extreme, blend them with each other and then think about the potential returns. Then we watch. It’s better than acting. Or as Charlie Munger urges “this habit of committing far more time to learning and thinking than to doing is no accident”. Occasionally weadjust our sights as time, learning and our thoughts progress. We need to give up the excessive arrogance implicit in forecasts if we are to maximise returns." - James Anderson, "Abberration or Premonition" (2018)
Friday, November 1, 2024
Daily Economic Update: November 1, 2024
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Daily Economic Update: June 6, 2025
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