Thursday, January 4, 2024

Daily Economic Update: January 4, 2024

The 10Y crossed 4%, only to subsequently rally back to 3.92% while stocks sold off for a second straight session have made for a tough start to 2024.  Perhaps the market decided it was getting a little ahead of itself in pricing in complete euphoria at the tail end of 2023 or perhaps it's just really hard to create narratives to correspond with every daily market move.  Yesterday's JOLTS data continued to show some softening in the labor market with hiring and quits on the decline.  The FOMC minutes reaffirmed that the Fed had likely reached the peak of their policy rate, but there didn't seem to be provide much indication that the Fed was looking to cut aggressively any time soon.

On the day ahead jobless claims will be the main event ahead of Friday's Job's report.

XTOD: Highlight from FOMC minutes: “Several participants noted the risk that, if labor demand were to weaken substantially further, the labor market could transition quickly from a gradual easing to a more abrupt downshift in conditions.”  They believe in the mechanics behind Sahm Rule.

XTOD: One thing I find myself shaking my head over pretty much daily is the size of the financial complexity complex v. the ease/simplicity of setting up a reasonable portfolio of cheap index funds.  
Why are so many people engaged in making it seem harder than it really is?

XTOD: The single family home is a terrible investment. Low return, high leverage, illiquid, idiosyncratic risk, value depends on local politics, home value falls with local economy and your job. Build "generational wealth" in stocks, which are far more "accessible." Stop subsidizing!

Wednesday, January 3, 2024

Daily Economic Update: January 3, 2024

2024 started with a sell-off in tech stocks following Barclay's downgrade of Apple shares and a higher 10Y yield, with the 10Y crossing 3.95%.  On the day ahead it's Richmond Fed's Barkin, JOLTS, ISM Manufacturing and FOMC Minutes.

XTOD: Scratching my head over the debate about whether inflation was caused by supply constraints (team transitory) or excess demand. Inflation is a result of imbalances between the two. Pouring massive monetary stimulus into a supply constrained economy was going to inevitably lead to inflation.

XTOD: I knew the 90s were back, but I didn't realize it was so back that Abercrombie and Fitch shares are at all-time highs.  The stock is now at 90.96, with a 690.96% all time percentage gain.

XTOD: Jimmy Kimmel threatens legal action against quarterback Aaron Rodgers for suggesting that his name would be on the Epstein associates list.

Tuesday, January 2, 2024

Daily Economic Update: January 2, 2024

2024 is upon us. I wanted to start the year with a list of words and phrases that I think can be retired and I don't want to hear used in 2024, however, I've been a bit under the weather and didn't get too far.  Feel free to create your own list or add words in the comments:
  • "Data-dependent" - as it relates to the Fed or really any business decision, of course the decision was data-dependent. Until you can show me the time that no data was considered at all, this phrase should be retired.  How many times did you hear the Fed's decisions are now "data-dependent".  Come on, that implies the previous decisions considered no data. The Fed employees thousands of researchers and economist who run models using data, everything they do is data-dependent.

  • "Reimagine" - I thought this one was slowly fading from the vernacular, but I feel like I saw a reemergence late in the year. Enough imagining, if you can identify the problem and know a good solution, just make a meaningful change to the thing.
We finished 2023 with stocks (9 straight winning weeks) and bonds rallying post the December 13th FOMC meeting and the market pricing in nearly 7 rate cuts for 2024 and equity strategist revising their S&P targets higher.  The consensus seems to be pricing in a "soft landing", a phrase for which there is no consensus as to it's meaning and as to whether and when it is achieved.  Economist of different stripes continue to argue over whether this period of inflation was "transitory".

Holiday travel and spending seemed strong and Atlanta Fed's wage growth tracker shows wages tracking 5.2% higher than the prior year and that's before we head into raises and bonus season.  If wages continue to rise at a 5% clip, it would seem that it could create challenges for further disinflation, especially if the Fed begins to cut rates without unemployment rising.

If you are looking for narratives that run counter to the current consensus calling for lower yields there are a handful out there, one of which is Canadian economist William White's "new age of scarcity" prediction.  White, who worked at the BIS with Claudio Borio, has been writing about how the world is transitioning from what he calls an "age of plenty" to an "age of scarcity".  He points to:
  • The period from the 80's through 2020 as being characterized by positive supply shocks that lowered inflation and increased growth.
  • He sees 5 area's where previously positive supply-side forces are now working in reverse:
    1. Globalization - at present countries are de-risking supply chains, engaging in protectionism, all reversing trends that began with the break up of the Soviet Union and the opening up of China's economy.
    2. Labor Markets - at present the global labor market is shrinking and labor participation is falling, as well as evidence of global skills mismatches.
    3. Production Processes - moving from efficiency to resiliency.
    4. Energy and Natural Resources - decarbonization and the need for new metals for electrification will be costly.
    5. Digitalization - White believes it too early to tell whether there will be meaningful productivity gains from AI and other new technologies.
White further posits that the challenges associated with each of the aforementioned supply shocks will likely be met by increased expenditures by governments that will increase demand.  In summary he believes economies will face higher inflation and higher real rates for much longer than most expect.

I have no clue what views will be right in 2024, but I'm going to guess that the advice Paul Volcker left in his 2018 biography, "Keeping At It", may not be entirely lost on JPOW.  That advice is:
"A lesson from my career is that such successes [in maintaining low inflation] can carry the seeds of its own destruction. I've watched country after country, faced with damaging inflation, fight to restore stability.  Then, with victory in sight, the authorities relax and accept a "little inflation" in the hope of stimulating further growth, only to se the process resume all over again."

On the week ahead, the most attention will be on Friday's Jobs Report, but we'll also get JOLTS and FOMC Minutes on Wednesday and ISM data on both Wed and Fri. 

XTOD: Compare 2020 to 2023.  Use Phillips curve if you like.  Supply is the same.  Inflation is the same.  Inflation expectations are the same.  UE is the same.  Real demand is largely the same (people don’t drastically change their lifestyle in a few years).  The only thing left is the supply of currency, which went up massively during Covid.  The most obvious answer is fiscal impulse driven by deficit spending.  If you don’t fix the rate of deficit spending you will not fix inflation.  Deficit spending declined after the huge fiscal impulse but is accelerating again.  Yellen will want JPOW to print money to finance the debt, and JPOW will want yellen to issue duration to finance the debt.  So 2024 is either more inflation or much higher rates.  I would like a supply shock theorist to address this because I genuinely don’t understand how this can be ignored.

XTOD: So... Jamie Dimon, who has called bitcoin a "hyped up fraud", "worse than tulips", etc, is going to be the Authorized Participant for the biggest bitcoin ETF soon to be approved by @GaryGensler
, and run by the Fed's shadow money manager   Couldn't make this up

XTOD: ....Future historians will marvel at all this. It will seem obvious by 2033, if not sooner, that the pax americana faced a well-coordinated challenge from China, Russia, Iran and North Korea in the early 2020s. The first move was the invasion of Ukraine. The second was the war of Iran’s proxies against Israel. The third will most likely be a Chinese challenge to American primacy in the Indo-Pacific, perhaps — if Xi Jinping is bold — a blockade of Taiwan. 7/10....The pax americana seems to be ending. The fate of Ukraine — of Israel and Taiwan, too — hangs in the balance. I cannot say I am surprised. It was always very likely that the overreach of the Global War on Terror would be requited in this way: with a resurgence of isolationism.

XTOD (this was a pretty epic and long retort to some comments made by OpenAI's Emmett Shear): Emmett, Emmett, Emmett.   I'm not "accusing you of socialism".   I'm pointing out that you just articulated the single most Bolshevik idea ever suggested since an unemployed German intellectual, living off das kapital gains, wrote a book demanding that all investors should be murdered during a mass armed robbery.  https://x.com/Devon_Eriksen_/status/1739993013638623537?s=20



Friday, December 29, 2023

Daily Economic Update: December 29, 2023

 "What I really fear is time.  That's the devil: whipping us on when we'd rather loll, so the present sprints by, impossible to gasp, and all is suddenly past, a past that won't hold still, that slides into these inauthentic tales.  My past - it doesn't feel real in the slightest.  The person who inhabited it is not me.  It's as if the present me is constantly dissolving.  There's that line of Heraclitus: 'No man steps in the same river twice, for it is not the same river and he is not the same man.' That's quite right.  We enjoy this illusion of continuity, and we call it memory.  Which explains, perhaps, why our worst fear isn't the end of life but the end of memories."

                            -Tom Rachman, The Imperfectionist 

Thursday, December 28, 2023

Daily Economic Update: December 28, 2023

 "Comedy does not tell of famous and powerful men, but of base and ridiculous creatures, though not wicked; and it does not end with the death of the protagonists. It achieves the effect of the ridiculous by showing the defects and vices of ordinary men....Truth reached by depicting men and the world as worse than they are or than we believe them to be..."

                -Umberto Eco, The Name Of The Rose 

Wednesday, December 27, 2023

Daily Economic Update: December 27, 2023

 “Counterfactuals are the building blocks of moral behavior as well as scientific thought. The ability to reflect on one’s actions and envision alternative scenarios is the basis of free will and social responsibility.”

- Judea Pearl, The Book of Why 

Tuesday, December 26, 2023

Daily Economic Update: December 26, 2023

 "..the notion...that all these wondrous machines that, in one way or another, now allow us to avoid overworking our brains, will somehow diminish our capacity for thought, in much the same way that underused muscles with tend to atrophy, will stop working in the absence of need".

"But what if the opposite is true?  What if the mind does not work at all like a muscle? What if not having to tax our minds with such tedious matters as arithmetic and geography and spelling and memorizing so many facts actually frees our mind?  What if mental leisure gives it the time and space to suppose, ponder, ruminate, consider, assess, wonder, contemplate, imagine, dream?  What if by removing the storm and stress of daily mental need, lowering the mind's noise-to-signal ratio, we instead clear the mind and allow it, now less clouded, taxed and troubled to seek out the potential it always had? To be thoughtful, considerate, patient - and wise."

                - Simon Winchester, Knowing What We Know 

 

Friday, December 22, 2023

Daily Economic Update: December 22, 2023

"Often we tell ourselves, "Don't just sit there, do something!" But when we practice awareness, we discover something unusual.  We discover that the opposite may be more helpful, "Don't just do something, sit there!" We must learn to stop from time to time in order to see clearly.  At first, "stopping" may look like a kind of resistance to modern life, but it is not. It is not a reaction; it is a way of life.  Humankind's survival depends on our ability to stop rushing."

-Thich Nhat Hanh, Peace Is in Every Step

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’...