E

The overwhelming majority of forecasters in late 2013, believed that interest rates in 2014 would rise. They were wrong. Rates mostly went down. Two leading bond fund managers (Bill Gross and Jeff Gundlach) believed rates would remain low. They were right. Once again, most economists and primary Treasury dealers, and some Fed governors, expect that the Fed will begin raising the Fed…

The EU Commissioner

    The EU President Jean-Claude Juncker has announced a €315 bn investment scheme in yet another attempt to try to kick-start the economy, and create 1.3 million jobs. These schemes are hopeless because they keep hunting capital and raising taxes. Without confidence in the future, people will not invest or expand their business to offset…

Chicago PMI Suffers 4th Biggest Drop Since Lehman

Having surged to last October’s highs last month, Chicago PMI tumbled back to mediocrity in November, missing exuberant expectations by the most since July. As 60.8 (against 63.0 expectations) this is barely above the levels of Q1’s polar vortex as New Orders, Employment, and Production all fell (with only 2 components rising). This is the…

Durable Goods Improved In October 2014. The Internals Again Were

The headlines say the durable goods new orders improved. Our analysis agrees – and if you ignore defense aircraft, durable goods were again very soft month-over-month.  Econintersect Analysis: unadjusted new orders growth accelerated 0.3% (after decelerating a revised 2.1% the previous month) month-over-month , but is up 5.4% year-over-year.  the three month rolling average for unadjusted new orders decelerated 10.6% month-over-month, and up 5.9%…

OPEC’s Prisoner’s Dilemma

In the middle of November, the CEO of Vodafone (ADR) Vittorio Colao warned of a “prisoner’s dilemma” in the efforts to offer bundled television and broadband services.  It makes sense for a company to seek unique content to differentiate it from others. However, if all the providers try to secure exclusive content, it triggers an arms…