Wednesday, October 11, 2023

Daily Economic Update: October 11, 2023



Focus remains on the war in Israel.  Yields rallied strongly yesterday and continue to do so today with the 2Y down 2bps to 4.96%  and the 10Y down ~10bps to 4.56%.   Yesterday's NY Fed Survey of Consumer Expectations showed an increase in median inflation expectations at the 1 and 3 year horizons and households' reported some deterioration in respondents financial situations.  Fed Governor Waller spoke at 'The Legacy of Bennett McCallum and Lessons for Monetary Policy Today' conference, using his speech as an opportunity to discuss the importance of the credibility of the central bank, the Fed's responsibility for returning inflation back to target, and his view that the Fed will stay the course to achieve their inflation objective.  

ExxonMobil has confirmed they are buying Pioneer in an all-stock deal valued at $59.5bln. On the day ahead, PPI and FOMC Minutes are the economic highlights.  We also may have a vote on Speaker of the House at some point.

XTOD: Wall of Worry 1. Uncompromising U.S. Govt. Resorting to extreme  measures and lack of compromise led to credit downgrades by Fitch and S&P. If Moody's downgrades the US, Treasurys will no longer be triple-A and some investors will not long be allowed to own or Repo them. 2. U.S   Debt. Ironically almost the opposite of the first "worry," U.S.   government debt is   now in excess of $33 trillion   and growing. It is literally a time-bomb waiting to explode.  3. CMBS and commercial Real Estate Loans. Work-from-home policies have left offices in major cities partially vacant. Companies will take less office space and negotiate   lower rents, leaving many   commercial assets potentially insolvent. Another time bomb in waiting.  4.   China. China's economy will eventually crash similar to Japan in the early   1990s. Many market   commentators say "China   is the exception," but there never is an exception.  5.   Regional Banks. Their investment portfolios own US Treasurys, CMBS, and   commercial real   estate loans; at the same   time there is more competition for deposits due to higher interest rates.   Another time bomb waiting to  go off.

XTOD: AUSA: What was his involvement in the crimes?
Ellison: He was the head of Alameda then FTX. He directed me to commit these crimes.
AUSA: What makes you guilty?
Ellison: Alameda took several billions of dollars from FTX customers and used it for investments.
AUSA: What was the defendant's role?
Ellison: He set up the systems and told us to take the money.
AUSA: How much did Alameda take to repay its lenders?
Ellison: In the ballpark of $10 billion. Ultimately around $14 billion

XTOD: "You get in this vicious circle, where higher interest rates cause higher funding costs, cause higher debt issuance, which cause further bond liquidation, which cause higher rates, which put us in an untenable fiscal position." -Paul Tudor Jones

XTOD: Almost half of publicly-listed US companies are unprofitable, according to @GoldmanSachs
.  "Higher funding costs [viz higher interest rates] could force some of these companies to cut labor costs or even close."

XTOD: ECB Steps Up Scrutiny of Banks’ Commercial Real Estate Loans  @business  #CMBS  
The ECB has asked property valuers to explain the methodologies they use, as concerns grow that banks in the region have been too slow to mark down the value of commercial real estate loans.

XTOD: Veteran banker calling for "TARP 2.0" in Op-Ed to help banks with steep unrealized losses on their securities holdings  
Proposal would lend up to $1 Trillion against securities that have lost value to Fed's "meteoric increase" in interest rates ....Here is full piece (paywalled):
https://americanbanker.com/opinion/u-s-banks-need-tarp-2-0-a-trapped-asset-relief-program


Tuesday, October 10, 2023

Daily Economic Update: October 10, 2023

 


Long end of the yield curve is down double digit basis points to start the day as they catch a flight-to-quality/haven bid and Fed officials seemed to lean slightly dovish yesterday.  The 2Y is down ~8bps to 4.99% and the 10Y is down ~12bps to 4.67%. 

Yesterday's Fedspeak seemed to indicate higher bond yields can have an impact on the path of policy rates, perhaps leading to no additional rate hikes.  Both Logan and Jefferson highlighted the tightening of financial conditions driven by the recent rise in the 10Y yield as important consideration in assessing whether rates are sufficiently restrictive to return inflation back to 2%.  Logan pointed out that the reason for the increase in long-term yields matters for policy, if the driver of the increase is more driven by increases in the "term premium", then Logan would be more inclined not to hike.  Jefferson highlighted that rising yields could change investors attitudes to risk and uncertainty and act as additional tightening.  However, both officials were careful with their words, also noting that higher yields could be investors assessing the underlying economy as stronger than anticipated.  The nuance in both officials words seems to indicate that they might be familiar with Milton Friedman's interest rate fallacy whereby he stated: "Initially, higher monetary growth would reduce short-term interest rates even further. As the economy revives, however, interest rates would start to rise. That is the standard pattern and explains why it is so misleading to judge monetary policy by interest rates. Low interest rates are generally a sign that money has been tight, as in Japan; high interest rates, that money has been easy."

The IMF revised up their U.S. growth forecast (in real terms) for 2023 to 2.1%.  The forecast for U.S. 2024 is 1.5%. This morning's NFIB Small Business Optimism index fell to the lowest in 4 months and continues to cite inflation and labor quality as tops concerns.  Ahead on the day is Wholesale Inventories, more Fedspeak and the ongoing developments in the Middle East.


XTOD: Israel's response to the unprecedented multi-pronged attack by Palestinian gunmen from the Gaza Strip will 'change the Middle East,' Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said

XTOD: Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan, who has been at the hawkish end of the FOMC, takes seriously the recent run-up in Treasury yields and term premiums, in particular. 
Her conviction about the need to hike again sounds like it is diminishing as a result.

XTOD: According to WSJ, "Evergrande had the equivalent of more than $332 billion in liabilities by June, which included money owed to suppliers, unfinished projects and its bond and loan obligations."
This is substantially more than Argentina's external debt.

XTOD: Claudia is a baller. Create a whole new field. Win the Nobel Prize. Put out a short and understated tweet with a typo to celebrate.

XTOD: Overall Leasing Demand Turns Negative ⁦ @CoStarGroup Property Markets Give Back 26 Million Square Feet, Add 151 Million Square Feet of New Supply #CMBS

XTOD:  @MBAMortgage ,  @NAHBhome , and @nardotrealtor  just wrote a letter to Fed Chair Jerome Powell.  They’re asking for… 1. No more rate hikes   2. The Fed to “not sell off any of its MBS holdings until and unless the housing finance market has stabilized”

XTOD: My continued takeaways - The real estate industry faces a massive recession (in early stages), Fed should continue MBS roll off, the Fed should hike another 25bps. This industry and these people are destroying the future of America.

Monday, October 9, 2023

Daily Economic Update: October 9, 2023


The U.S. bond market is closed today, but equity markets are open.  While markets continue to interpret the large headline Jobs number from Friday, it is the unanticipated attack by Hamas on Israel has markets attention, especially oil markets where crude is up 3% this morning.   While geopolitics slide back into focus, markets will still get a slew of data this week with the highlights being the inflation reports (CPI and PPI) as well as the minutes of the last FOMC meeting.   Bank earnings and plenty of Fedspeak are in the mix as well.  On the week ahead:

Today:  Fedspeak from Logan and Barr
Tue: Wholesale inventories, NY fed inflation expectations, Fedspeak
Wed:  PPI, FOMC Minutes, moar Fedspeak
Thur: CPI, jobless claims, more Fedspeak
Fri:  import prices and UofM

XTOD: Iran Helped Plot Attack on Israel Over Several Weeks: WSJ  here we go

XTOD: Nonlinearity: Could Ozempick cause a deflation in the price of food? A mere 1% drop in demand can cause a significant overload.

XTOD: Brookfield Property Risks Being Cut to Junk on Refinancing Needs  @business  #CMBS 
S&P is considering cutting Brookfield to junk status because the company has “substantial” amounts of maturing debt to refinance during a time of higher interest rates and lower property values

XTOD: Goldman Sachs raises $15bn to buy stakes in private equity funds via @FT  “an appropriate discount”  Wait, they weren’t worth what they were marked at?  Well knock me over with a #volatilitylaundered feather.

XTOD: Crowding out is a real thing.

XTOD: "I continue to be amazed that people think you can do what we’ve done over the last 15 years, then jack rates this high and everything’s going to be fine. 
Am I open to being wrong? Yes, but it's kinda gonna be one of those 'Paul on the road to Damascus' moments where if I'm wrong, my religion needs to change. If I'm wrong, everything I know about finance needs to be uprooted and spun around on its head." Well put by  @KYRRadio
.
XTOD: Treasury yields were already challenging the Fed’s control over interest rates (see link below). Global financial uncertainty connected to attack on Israel (and repercussions) may cause turmoil in Treasury market if foreign holders start scrambling for U.S. dollars; while Treasury securities are traditional “safe haven” when global tensions rise, we saw in March 2020 that the Treasury market froze while demand for dollars skyrocketed. Are Fed officials gaming out enhanced use of FIMA repo facility (repurchase agreement that allows foreign central banks to get cash from Fed in exchange for their Treasury securities so they don’t just dump them) and currency swap arrangements? Perhaps we need to exercise greater discernment over which foreign central banks are entitled to this privilege? Under Bretton Woods, the goal was to provide for currency stability among allied nations. And what are the monetary policy implications of providing vast amounts of dollars to foreign central banks with no control over how they are further loaned. 
The autumn bond rout is challenging Wall Street’s longstanding belief that the U.S. government can’t sell too many Treasurys https://wsj.com/finance/investing/government-spending-hurting-bond-portfolio-8a063f39?st=5lmkje3nh7kwef5 via  @WSJ



Friday, October 6, 2023

Daily Economic Update: October 6, 2023


Jobs Day in 'merica.   Yields are up slightly this morning with the 2Y at 5.04% and the 10Y at 4.74%.  Forecast calls for headline of +170K, a decline in the unemployment rate to 3.7% and average hourly earnings growth of 0.3% mom and 4.3% yoy.  Jobless claims again remained extremely low and, per Reuters reporting, additional data from Challenger, Gray & Christmas showed that September layoffs were down 37% from August, but up from a year prior.  Oil remains off recent highs having one of its worst weeks since March, down ~9%.  And in energy a huge deal is in the works a energy space as Exxon is reported to be near buying shale giant Pioneer Natural Resources.  Fedspeak yesterday from Daly and Goolsbee was largely in the pause with no need to hike further camp.  Daly was adamant that we're not seeing any signs of a wage-price spiral  On the Fed front we'll get a speech from Governor Waller at noon today.  

XTOD: What's the most Gothilocky reaction for NFPs tomorrow?
#1 = Strong NFP, followed by an Equity bounce and a Bond puke ("strong economy bro!")
#2 = Weak NFP, followed by an Equity puke and a Bond puke  ("it's never been more over")

XTOD: "We find that funds with facial unattractive managers outperform funds with attractive managers by over 2% per annum. We next show that good-looking managers attract significant higher fund flow..."

XTOD: Wall Street keeps thinking nothing of lasting significance happened in the spring of 2020, so they keep pounding away with all the same pre-pandemic rules and then "struggle to explain" when none of these rules work anymore?
In other words, don't be @Austan_Goolsbee. He is "puzzled" about higher rates because he still thinks it's 2019, and why his speeches about how things work have been way off the mark.
* The answer may be that we are in a higher inflation world!!!
* The labor market has changed forever (see the strikes and remote work)
* Deglobalization is a thing that is not going away
* Energy output is now a political weapon.
Want to know who does not understand this? Analysts Wall Street droning on and on about used car prices and airline tickets. This assumes, again, that nothing of lasting significance changed the inflation outlook in the spring of 2020. Instead, what is needed is a new understanding of how post-pandemic inflation works. It is not the same as the pre-pandemic inflation world. It is higher, and yields are following inflation higher.
Do this, and the "struggle" to explain rising yields will disappear.

XTOD: Anecdotally, from speaking with investors, this rings true. People were completely caught off guard by deficit coming in at $1.9 trillion - then they study the unsustainable outlook & see total dysfunction in DC = higher rates

XTOD: “sustainable” results is another mystery the CBO does not explain."  Of course, if interest payments really rose to 20%, even 10% of GDP, they would likely have big economic effects. The most obvious thing is increase spending, GDP and likely demand side inflation. But if they did that, the ratio of interest payments to GDP would fall. The reason this doesn't happen in the standard forecasts is, as I've said, they simply don't model the effects. It's easy to get a number to go to infinity in a model, but presumably we care about reality This is where the Fed comes in. If the Fed is raising rates, than its because they think the rising private interest payments drain demand more than the interest income adds to it. But if that's true, than again we're back to asking why we care if economic factors are good.  If these interest payments don't have macroeconomic effects, why should we care (outside of impacts on inequality)? This brings us to the final issue. As economist Scott Fullwiler pointed out 7 years ago, these models also don't model private debt ratios...Here the "Schrödinger's interest payments". issue gets especially stark. household and business interest payments relative to GDP would likely rise faster and crash the economy well before government interest payments got that high...Thus what won't be "sustainable" is Fed interest rate policy, not debt or deficits. On the other hand, if for some reason private sector debt to gdp (and thus private sector interest) stayed much lower than the public sector's, we're back to "lowering rates would reduce spending"

XTOD: “More fiction has been written in Excel than in Word.”    - Pythagoras, 544 BC

XTOD: This is not a meme stock, not the U.S. dollar, not yields and not even the global debt. 
This is the chart of orange juice futures 

Thursday, October 5, 2023

Daily Economic Update: October 5, 2023

 

Yields are down another couple of basis points with the 2Y at 5.03% and the 10Y at 4.716% after a reversal of some of their recent bear steepening trend following yesterday's ADP employment data coming in below expectations. The move lower in yields was despite better than expected factory orders and ISM services data showing continued strength in the service sector.  The Kaiser Permanente health care 'temporary' strike became official, adding to a growing list of striking workers in 2023.  European data this morning has shown weakness again in Germany with both exports and imports falling more than expected.  Ahead of tomorrow's Jobs Report, we'll get another look at the job market with initial jobless claims this morning and there will be more Fedspeak.

XTOD: Is the Fed finally getting tighter financial conditions (via a term premium bump)? 
“These types of things often take on a life of their own until they self-correct” through weaker data or “a more sinister mechanism, such as a financial stability scare.”

XTOD: Two implications of the incredible run-up in real interest rates over the last month: 
1. The Fed should have a higher bar to raise rates again--to the degree they have more work to do this is doing some of it. 
2. More deficit reduction would be really helpful right now.

XTOD: The $MOVE is back above 140, time to send the bond market to its room for a time out.  The MOVE @ 140 implies a yield change of ~9bp a day for the next month, that is not sustainable; similar to the VIX near 50, or ~3.1% a day for a month.

XTOD: 5yr TIPs with current real yields at 2.6% will be the most compelling risk-return asset vs cash over the next couple years.  These bonds are offering boom level yields at a time when the economic cycle is softening and recent market moves suggest further softening.

XTOD: Will Michael Lewis's exposure as a fraud finally wake people up to the more general problem of rampant Lex Fridmanism?

XTOD: If long rates continue to rise we are not out of the woods for additional banking problems.  In addition, office and other challenged CRE will be harder to refinance, raising non-performing loans at the same time of large held to maturity securities losses.

XTOD: I am expecting 'unseasonality' over the balance of the year
*  In the coming months we will be forced to face and to navigate the hangover caused by years of quantitative easing and ZIRP
* Mounting consumer, corporate and government debt, the lack of discipline in fiscal

XTOD: In our latest infographic, economists from our #CenterForInflationResearch answer the question: How does raising interest rates help to lower #inflation?
Explore now: http://clefed.org/3Burp5e

XTOD: Hang onto the first people you hire. They're crucial to the company.

XTOD: I think the thing that offends me the most about this book is how Lewis gives a microphone to SBF to speak grandly about all kinds of broad philosophical, social, political, and economic conditions, as though an oracle, when, in fact, he sounds like a spoiled child.

Wednesday, October 4, 2023

Daily Economic Update: October 4, 2023

 

This October is already making history as McCarthy was forced to vacate the speakership, a first in U.S. history.  Of course this raises the prospect of a government shutdown. Everything sold off yesterday with the 10Y yield crossing 4.80% as bonds continued to bear steepen, and stocks falling by over 1%.  The USD-JPY touched 150 before it is assumed the BoJ intervened to support the Yen.  This all following stronger than expected job opening data. The 2Y is currently yielding 5.14% and the 10Y at 4.81%.

On the day ahead we'll get ADP employment, services data and plenty of Fedsleak.

XTOD: Every past market decline looks like an opportunity, every future decline looks like a risk.

XTOD: Could 10-year Treasury rates hit 13%?  @RickSantelli  charts the path to much, much higher yields, and warns that the Fed is running out of tricks

XTOD: The JOLTs summary - hiring rate stays below 2019 levels, quits remain right at it, openings have a slight reversal (though v/u remained the same for August).

XTOD: The Beveridge Curve has Normalized in a big way…. Solid progress, but economic strength continues - that’s a good thing when people have jobs. 

XTOD: Markets in a very dangerous spot here. Statistical risks flashing red. Banks and Utilities too. Credit starting to move. Lev loans liquidity sucked out. CRE unwind accelerating and housing market about to freeze. 

XTOD: But here’s the thing: the trade in 1987 was to play an equity crash. The trade today is to play the bond crash in 2023. Buying bonds then or shorting equities now was/is a deriv that may or may not work (worked in 87).

XTOD: He will go down in history as the man who reversed 30 yrs of ZIRP insanity. like him or not, he pulled the punch bowl away. Those that fail to see this, either support returning to an overleveraged ZIRP environment, or just dont understand how truly insane Greenspans spawn were.

XTOD: A Nobel Laureate Offers a Biting Critique of Economics - Angus Deaton says Larry Summers and other great minds in the profession have lost sight of its most important mission: Improving people’s lives.

XTOD: New monthly GDP estimates from S&P Global are out! NGDP grew at a 10.6% m/m ar (annualized rate) in August, accelerating from 9.2% in July....Consider the notion that inflation is what happens when there is too much money (NGDP) chasing too few goods (RGDP)....It's highly doubtful that RGDP can sustainably grow above 2%. Therefore, if NGDP growth is too high as S&P Global's estimates indicate, we should be ready for inflation to show some resurgence. Will be closely looking at NGDP when BEA releases its Q3 data on 10/26.

Tuesday, October 3, 2023

Daily Economic Update: October 3, 2023



Maybe the quote above was in reference to the Fed's inflation fight?  Speaking of the Fed, in an effort to stem the losses on their bond holdings they have decided to expand operations into the social media influencer sphere on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/federalreserveboard/  I'm sure Powell will be a successful influencer.

Yields are once again higher with the 2Y at 5.11% and the 10Y at 4.70%.  The USD continues to climb. USD-JPY flirting with 150. The Fedspeak yesterday from the likes of Bowman, Barr and Mester sounded nearly unanimously centered on the higher for longer rate path. 

U.S. manufacturing data yesterday was also stronger than expected with employment strong and the prices paid component showing some relief.  However, with respect to the prices paid, the ISM report notes that higher energy prices could affect that data point going forward.  Timothy Fiore, the Chair of the Institute for Supply Management's Manufacturing Business Survey Committee added in the report: "More importantly, the share of sector GDP registering a composite PMI® calculation at or below 45 percent — a good barometer of overall manufacturing weakness — was 6 percent in September, compared to 15 percent in August and 25 percent in July, a clear positive,” 

On the day ahead it's Bostic speaking and the JOLTS data as highlights.  Overnight the Royal Bank of Australia held their cash rate at 4.1%.

XTOD: MLB Wild Card Get-in Prices (Game 1) 
3 pm ET: Rangers @ Rays: $33 
4:30 pm ET: Blue Jays @ Twins: $7 
7:00 pm ET: Diamondbacks @ Brewers: $22 
8:00 pm ET: Marlins @ Phillies: $199

XTOD: Fed's Mester Says One More Rate Hike Likely, Then Hold For Some Time

XTOD: Dear author. We need to talk. Please review the last several decades and you will see stronger economic growth occurring when interest rates were higher than they are today.  The ZIRP era brought us useless innovations like Bored Ape NFTs. But it also led to world-changing innovation, says 
@karlbykarlsmith  via  opinion...Truly promising innovations will attract capital. They always do. And with higher rates, they won’t have to compete with all those idiotic “innovations”  that have been able to attract investment dollars because of ZIRP...Low productivity, wealth inequality, increased corporate concentration, excessive leverage, financial instability, rampant speculation - these are all enabled by ultra low rates.  Happy to send you the studies if you’d like...Is it worth tolerating all these negative side effects, just to make it easier for some unspecified, theoretical “moon shot” to get capital?...Boosting the attractiveness of tech investments and enriching the prospects of venture capitalists are not part of the Fed’s mandate.

XTOD: When Fed was remitting hundreds of billions to Federal budget from its portfolio earnings, it was counted as revenues to the budget. Now that the Fed is running a loss and shelling out huge interest payments to banks on cash deposits, it does not count as expenditures to the budget. Magic accounting that doesn’t conform to GAAP rules. 

XTOD: United Airlines would save $80 million a year if the average passenger weight falls by 10 pounds

XTOD: The USD is strong due to 1) relative yield spreads and 2) relative energy balances. 
Even if monetary policy makes a U-turn, policy-makers can't change the ongoing imbalances in the energy space, and a weaker USD seems very unlikely from here.

XTOD: I don't really know what my equity view is right now. Seasonals are raging bullish but this chart gives me pause.  I am generally not a huge fan of the inverted yield curve as a predictor of recession because it doesn’t include a timing factor and therefore ends up costing people much money as they position way too early for the inevitable recession. 
A potentially somewhat better timing indicator is when there is a bear steepening during a period of yield curve inversion. This next chart shows those occasions in blue and US recessions in red. 
You can see the blue bars have generally been pretty terrible times to own stocks. The signal in April 1999 was early, but the signal timing in 1990 and 2007 was excellent. Small sample size, obviously. No call to action here, it’s just something to think about and it’s an offset to a bullish seasonal risky asset view. The ongoing collapse in gold is a bit of a yellow flag with regard to current liquidity conditions, too.


Monday, October 2, 2023

Daily Economic Update: October 2, 2023


October, the month best know for: (a) The Panic of 1907 (also a good book), (b) Black Thursday, October 24, 1929, and (c) Black Monday (also a Showtime comedy), October 19, 1987....Ok, maybe it's best known for Oktoberfest or Halloween or pumpkin flavored lattes, or MLB Playoffs or something else, but here's to October's, lets hope not to make negative history.  September ended with the Atlanta Fed's GDP Now 3Q GDP estimate of 4.9% and the NY Fed GDP  Nowcast at 2.1% further evidencing the divergence in interpretation of the economy's performance.  This October starts with the government shutdown averted, for now at least, UAW still on strike and the prospect of a Kaiser Permanente healthcare strike, and the resumption of student loan payments.  Yields are up ~5-6bps to start the day, the 2Y is 5.10%, the 10Y is 4.62%.

On the day ahead it's ISM manufacturing data, construction spending and a Powell speech. The highlights of the week will likely be on the labor front with the JOLTS report Tuesday and Jobs report Friday.  There is also plenty of Fedspeak.
On the week:
Tues: JOLTS
Wed: ADP Employment, ISM services
Thur: Jobless claims
Fri: Jobs Day

In full disclosure, this author is not an Orioles fan, but any team that goes from 100 losses to 100 wins in a two year span deserves some credit.  In honor of the Orioles making the playoffs for the first time since 2016 and because their now injured closer had one of the best walkouts in all of baseball this year, for the month of October I'll be starting each post with an epigraph (see quote at top of post) from the HBO series The Wire.  There are plenty of business and leadership lessons one can learn from the series.

Speaking of business and leadership, the CNBC appearance by Barry Sternlicht of Starwood Capital Group on Friday is worth a listen.  Barry hits on the tug-of-war between Congressional spending and the Fed's inflation fight, discussing the "deficit out of control".  Maybe Barry believes in the Hamilton Norm? And the risk of fiscal dominance: "he's going to have to [go back to QE]".  If its true that our fiscal largesse is a problem (shh...don't tell Stephanie Kelton), many think it's inevitable that Powell will be forced to lower rates.  But maybe Powell will heed my favorite advice to central banker's courtesy of Peter Stella: “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.” which might force political leaders to find other solutions.

Friday's PCE seemed to fall into the goldilocks reading camp, but NY Fed's Williams indicated rates should remain high for a long time: "My current assessment is that we are at, or near, the peak level of the target range for the federal funds rate. I expect we will need to maintain a restrictive stance of monetary policy for some time to fully restore balance to demand and supply and bring inflation back to our 2 percent longer-run goal."  He used the analogy of layers of an onion and that the inner layer of inflation, including shelter and services, will continue to be the most challenging.

Economist Brad DeLong had a good substack post discussing both the PCE read as well as the recent expert commentary on the risk of continued rising yields.  He concludes his post as follows: "if either BlackRock or JPMC actually thought that 10-Year Treasuries were going to 7% with any confidence, they would have and would have told customers and clients to take positions and the 10-Year Treasury would already be at 7%. It isn’t.  There may well be more inflationary shocks in our future. But it really looks like the shocks in our past—the reopening-bottleneck shock, the fiscal insurance against a return to secular stagnation shock, and the Putin attack on Ukraine shock—are now in our past. And, right now, the ocean looks remarkably calm again."

XTOD: If someone asks you to define "chutzpah," you no longer need to say "like when a guy who killed his parents asks for clemency because he's an orphan." 
You can say, "like private equity providing loan-shark liquidity to investors in illiquid PE funds."

XTOD: We talk and write a lot about all the bad ways the pandemic hit the economy. We should talk more abt the surge in entrepreneurship it unleashed — reversing a decades-long decline.   It’s not a mirage. 

XTOD: important point here: these systems are much better at doing tasks than jobs.  and giving people better tools to do their work faster often leads to qualitative changes in what they can do.  (of course, over the long run, we expect these systems will be able to do all of some of today's jobs and aren't trying to hide the ball on that. confident we will find new and much better jobs when that happens!)

XTOD: Duane “Keffe D” Davis, the man who admitted to being in the car used to gun down Tupac Shakur in 1996, was arrested and indicted Friday in Las Vegas for the murder of the legendary rapper, according to multiple sources.


Edward Quince's Wisdom Bites: The Marks Series - The Futility of Macro Forecasting and the Value of "I Don't Know"

Edward Quince (EQ): Howard, one of the prevailing themes on this blog is the inherent uncertainty in financial markets, often summarized by...