Showing posts with label fiscal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fiscal. Show all posts

2016-12-19

MacroView: OECD & Trump: Fiscal Initiatives to Escape Low-growth Trap

MacroView |  ©2016 DomainMondo.com
Domain Mondo's weekly review of  macro economic and investing news: 1. OECD & Trump; 2. Confidence higher since Trump election; 3. FOMC rate increase; 4. Dollar strengthens, gold falls; 5. Trump talked, Fed listened; 6. Caveat from Jeff Gundlach; 7. Trump Summit with Tech Leaders; 8. Did Russia Hack the DNC and Clinton campaign? Who cares? 9. Student loans, which lie did they believe? 10. Good investing is boring.
 
MacroView Feature •  OECD and Trump Agree: Use Fiscal Initiatives to Escape Low-growth Trap

Jamie Dimon: Blame Bad Public Policy for Slow Growth

Video above published Dec. 15, 2016: JPMorgan Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon discussed Detroit’s economic recovery and whether the techniques they are using could be replicated elsewhere with Bloomberg’s Megan Murphy.

Make better use of fiscal initiatives to escape low-growth trap, OECD says in latest Global Economic Outlook (OECD.org Nov 28, 2016):
"Among the major advanced economies, activity is expected to accelerate in the United States, due to an assumed easing of fiscal policy, with the economy projected to grow by 2.3% in 2017 and 3% in 2018. The euro area will grow at a 1.6% rate in 2017 and by 1.7% in 2018. In Japan, growth is projected at 1% in 2017 and 0.8% in 2018. The 35-country OECD area is projected to grow by 2% in 2017 and 2.3% in 2018, according to the Outlook.
"With rebalancing continuing in China, growth is expected to continue drifting lower, to 6.4% in 2017 and 6.1% in 2018. India’s growth rates are expected to hover above 7.5% over the 2017-18 period, but many emerging market economies will continue to grow at a more sluggish pace. The deep recession in Brazil is expected to end in 2017, after which the economy will grow at a 1.2% rate in 2018.
"The Outlook draws attention to conditions that create a “window of opportunity” for new fiscal initiatives, as extraordinarily accommodative monetary policy has led to very low interest rates and created fiscal space. A targeted annual increase in public spending of ½ percent of GDP could be financed for several years in most countries without increasing the debt-to-GDP ratio in the medium term. Combining this initiative with structural reforms, and acting collectively across countries, would boost the impact, according to the Outlook.
"“This is not a blank cheque for governments,” Mr GurrĂ­a said. “The OECD is calling for fiscal policy to be used more wisely, with spending targeted at areas that boost growth, like high-quality infrastructure investment, innovation, education and skills, which also make growth more inclusive.” Read the full speech.
The mission of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), Paris, France, is to promote policies that will improve the economic and social well-being of people around the world. The OECD's goal is "to build a stronger, cleaner and fairer world." Members and partners of the OECDFor more see:

2.  Consumer, business, CEO confidence higher since Trump election"Americans from all corners of the economy seem to be enjoying the conditions a lot more since the election of Donald Trump. Nearly every measure of consumer, business, or executive confidence has gained in the month since the election, according to Michelle Meyer, chief US economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch."--BusinessInsider.com (P.S. Someone ought to tell Michelle Obama.)

3.  U.S. Federal Reserve FOMC Press Conference LIVE Video Replay 12/14/16The end of a flatline monetary policy?
source: Statista
4.  Dollar Climbs to Strongest Since 2003 on Fed Path; Bonds Drop | Bloomberg.com Dec 15, 2016: "The dollar climbed to the highest level since 2003 against the euro and gold plunged as the prospect of a steeper path for U.S. interest rates filtered through markets."

5. Trump Talked, the Fed Listened: Let’s Shrink the Balance Sheet, Bullard Says | WolfStreet.com

6. Caveat from Jeff Gundlach, December 13, 2016, webcast"... stocks typically rise in the days after an election, just as they have. But they drop after the president is sworn in, as investors realize that he does not have a magic wand to implement everything they are hopeful for ..."

7. Trump Summit with Tech LeadersTechReview: Silicon Valley's Pilgrimage to Trump Tower to Meet Trump.

8. Did Russia Hack the DNC and Clinton campaign? Who cares? If so, was it a good thing Wikileaks.org exposed Clinton & DNC corruption and collusion, including collusion with so-called mainstream media (MSM), the "rigged" Democratic primary against Bernie Sanders, all the conflicts of interest and "pay-to-play" schemes, and foreign government funding of the Clinton Foundation while Hillary was Secretary of State, $200-800,000 per speech fees, and all the other things the Clintons, the Clinton campaign, the Washington establishment, and mainstream media did not want us to know? I think you know the answer.
"Here are two of political history’s great constants: first, countries meddling in the internal affairs of others (both enemies and “friends”); and, second, bogus charges from a faction in one country that foreigners are meddling in its internal affairs to help another faction. Both are poison for any country that wishes to rule itself."--Jeremy Scahill, Jon Schwarz, TheIntercept.com
The WaPo-NYTimes-MSM narrative of Russian election hacking has become so incessant and emphatic that it’s easy to forget that no one has proven the claim. TheIntercept.com's Sam Biddle "sifted the public evidence, most of which comes from private security firms with a vested interest in the outcome, and found questionable assumptions, guesswork, and speculation." See Here’s the Public Evidence Russia Hacked the DNC — It’s Not Enough | TheIntercept.com December 14, 2016:
"It’s very hard to buy the argument that the Democrats were hacked by one of the most sophisticated, diabolical foreign intelligence services in history, and that we know this because they screwed up over and over again."
On the other hand, if you truly want to understand how and why Hillary Clinton lost the 2016 election, read How Clinton lost Michigan — and blew the election | POLITICO.com.

"People believe the news they want to ... The establishment is up for grabs."
--Lefsetz.com

9.  Which lie did they believe?--"Free government money, just sign here" or "With all the money you'll be making after college, the student loans won't be a problem"--Home ownership for those under 30 shrinks while student debt keeps growing:
Millennial (under age of 30) Home Ownership Shrinks as Student Loan Debt Grows

•  One More Thing: Good investing is boring
"If investing is entertaining, if you're having fun, you're probably not making any money. Good investing is boring."--George Soros
“Good investing is usually quite boring.”--Adam Nash, CEO of Wealthfront

-- John Poole, Editor, Domain Mondo  

feedback & comments via twitter @DomainMondo


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2016-12-12

MacroView | Trump Effect: Breaking The Curse, A New Paradigm

MacroView |  ©2016 DomainMondo.com
Domain Mondo's weekly review of  macro economic and investing news:
 
MacroView Feature • Trump Effect--Breaking the Curse, A New Paradigm--"the 'Curse of Correlation' has lifted, for now ..."--Convergex.com

The “Risk On, Risk Off” markets of 2010–2015, responded to macro news, everything depended on market perception of central bank interest rate policy. Since the election of Donald Trump, investors have been identifying new macro trends (e.g., higher interest rates) and unlock potential winners--financials, industrials, materials, healthcare--and sell losers (tech, utilities). Correlation data, post-election, indicates this time is different from any point since the Financial Crisis. Get Ready for Dow 20,000 | Barrons.com: "... the Dow is outpacing both the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq. It could continue to outperform in the year ahead ..."
Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) UP 7.77% since Nov 8 (source: google.com)
Fed expected to raise rates

Video above published Dec 9, 2016, by FT.com: Sam Fleming talks to Donald Kohn and Joseph Gagnon about the prospect of higher interest rates and Donald Trump's proposed tax cuts. The Fed Open Market Committee (FOMC) meets December 13-14. 

Why the Fed will no longer be the big deal when it meets this week: The Federal Reserve Open Market Committee on Wednesday (Dec. 14) is expected to announce an interest rate hike — its second in a year, and also the second in 10 years. However, a 25 basis point increase in the Fed funds target rate has become anticlimactic because there's a new game in town for investors the Trump Effect:
"The surprise of the Republican sweep of Congress along with the Trump administration has really changed consensus expectations almost 180 degrees. We really are focusing in on some of the impacts that some of the policy changes could have. We may be shaking up the economic world in terms of what we've been waiting for, what the Fed has even been saying — we need Congress and fiscal policy to do some of the heavy lifting here. I guess in some cases the Fed isn't really leading the story as much as they had in the past, and in some ways the Fed is really following the market right now in terms of raising rates," said Scott Anderson, Chief Economist for Bank of the West.--CNBC.com
Why Trump's Fiscal Plans Won't Blow Up the Budget: Factor in the extent to which animal spirits will be unleashed--analysts cite a Trump proposal that could turbocharge corporate spending--Trump's business plan allows manufacturing companies to immediately expense their capital investments, while the deductibility of interest expenses on future loans would be eliminated, significantly increasing the net present value of a given investment project, and encouraging companies to ramp up spending.--Bloomberg.com.

China forex reserves drop $70bn

Video above published Dec 8, 2016, by FT.com: China’s foreign exchange reserves fell nearly $70bn last month as the country’s central bank burnt through more of its war chest in its battle to defend the renminbi from greater depreciation on the back of accelerating capital outflows.

•  Watch the yuan: The attitude of emerging-market policy makers to greater financial liberalization will be key in driving the next stage of global entanglement. China is, therefore, the elephant in the room. Beijing wishes to promote the global use of the yuan for trade and financial transactions, and permit two-way capital flows. But it faces a challenging balancing act, amid capital outflows and yuan-depreciation expectations. Outflows since the summer have ticked up since this year's low of $37.5 billion in February, rising to $69 billion in October, slightly up from $67 billion in September, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.--Bloomberg.com

•  Trump to name Exxon CEO Tillerson as Secretary of State: source | Reuters.com.

•  Tim Cook, Larry Page, Sheryl Sandberg ... are going to Trump’s tech summit next week | Recode.net: also attending Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella; Cisco CEO Chuck Robbins; IBM CEO Ginni Rometty; Intel CEO Brian Krzanich; Oracle CEO Safra Catz and even Jeff Bezos of Amazon.com Inc. The meeting will take place Wednesday (Dec. 14) in New York:
“I plan to tell the President-elect that we are with him and will help in any way we can. If he can reform the tax code, reduce regulation and negotiate better trade deals, the U.S. technology industry will be stronger and more competitive than ever.”--Safra Catz
•  Japan’s Pivot from Obama to Trump | NewYorker.com"Abe’s visit to Trump Tower in November went against the wishes of Obama’s White House, according to a Japanese media report, which cited an unnamed diplomatic source who said that it would be “unprecedented” because, “Mr. Trump is not yet the president.” But Richard Samuels, who heads the Center for International Studies at M.I.T., told me that Abe’s team “did what they had to do, quickly and well.” ... Ironically, Trump’s tough talk may help Abe achieve what Obama’s pivot never could: broad support from the Japanese public for revising Japan’s constitution." See also: Is Donald Trump already the President? | WashingtonExaminer.com: The era of Trump has already begun.

•  Democrats the "real threat" to the First Amendment: Time Warner CEO Jeff Bewkes told Business Insider's Henry Blodget that the "real threat" to the First Amendment did not come from President-elect Donald Trump during the campaign, but rather from the Democratic Party."--BusinessInsider.com.

•  One more thing: More #FakeNews from the WashingtonPost.com and NYTimes.com--see Anonymous Leaks to the WashPost About the CIA’s Russia Beliefs Are No Substitute for Evidence | TheIntercept.com by Glenn Greenwald; and also Kellyanne Conway calls [purported via anonymous sources] CIA report on Russian election meddling ‘laughable and ridiculous’ | WashingtonPost.com:
Unfortunately, as we found out on 9/11 and afterwards re: WMD in Iraq, the worst "intelligence" failures in U.S. history, "U.S. intelligence" claims or beliefs (particularly those of the Central Intelligence Agency a/k/a CIA) are often wrong and not credible. But at least the Russians are getting a good laugh out of all of this: Obama orders ‘full review’ of election hacks, results not to be made public | RT.com. See also: How To INSTANTLY Tell If Russia Hacked the Election | washingtonsblog.com.

-- John Poole, Editor, Domain Mondo


feedback & comments via twitter @DomainMondo


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