"We think they are days from failure. They think it is a temporary problem. This disconnect is dangerous."
Wednesday, October 11, 2023
Daily Economic Update: October 11, 2023
Tuesday, October 10, 2023
Daily Economic Update: October 10, 2023
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:
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.
Thursday, October 5, 2023
Daily Economic Update: October 5, 2023
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 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
On the day ahead we'll get ADP employment, services data and plenty of Fedsleak.
Tuesday, October 3, 2023
Daily Economic Update: October 3, 2023
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,”
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
Monday, October 2, 2023
Daily Economic Update: October 2, 2023
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.
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.
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."
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.
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