AI

“In the annual public surveys about trust and reputation, journalists and the media have regularly fallen near the very bottom, often just above Congress.”

The economy continues to expand and consistently exceed expectations across most data series. Yet confidence surveys continue to languish well below pre-pandemic levels; at the same time, investor bullishness has rarely been higher. This is unusual and should reconcile itself to some consistency. I would expect confidence to rise. Yet truthfully, it is fiscal dominance –¬ more so than monetary dominance ¬– that is the more significant issue. The debt ceiling is currently suspended. In January 2025, however, it will automatically come back into effect. This means that the U.S. Treasury will not be able to issue more debt until Congress raises or suspends the ceiling again. However, they still have spending obligations and are running structural deficits due to the policies Congress has implemented for decades. Thus, government spending could potentially be forced downward – depending on whether conservatives or liberals control Congress. If that happens, it would be a net positive for the economy.

“In the annual public surveys about trust and reputation, journalists and the media have regularly fallen near the very bottom, often just above Congress.” Read More »

“Sitting [in my office] on a Sunday afternoon… going to the candidates’ debate…”

It has been a bad start to September for the financial markets. The earnings reports portrayed a mixed picture for both the tech sector and the broad economy. Added to that is the upcoming presidential election. Markets do not like uncertainty. There’s plenty of it, and it’s not going away anytime soon.

“Sitting [in my office] on a Sunday afternoon… going to the candidates’ debate…” Read More »

“The ancient art of deception is to present two lies and get the people arguing viciously about which is true.”

When the Fed finally started raising interest rates in March 2022, Mr. Powell reminded investors that the Fed’s primary objectives were full employment and stable prices. The Fed is now as close as it has been to achieving those objectives since the pandemic.
A balanced and patient Fed has been a stabilizing force in a chaotic world. Global GDP is rising, and headline inflation pressures in most countries appear to be abating. Perhaps the Fed’s duel mandate is on the verge of being realized.
Mr. Powell’s Fed last hiked rates in July 2023, yet the economy appears to be slowing more quickly now than it has since the Fed paused. Indeed, reporting to Congress last week, Mr. Powell sounded even more dovish than he did at the G7 confab 10 days ago. He seems convinced the Fed is succeeding in reducing inflation and is on track to reach its target objective of 2%. Maybe he’s right.

“The ancient art of deception is to present two lies and get the people arguing viciously about which is true.” Read More »

“Prejudice is a great time saver. You can form opinions without having to get the facts.”

All three key US equity indices made all-time new highs for the week on the notion that economic data was softer. We saw:
1. A slowdown in housing activity. (Existing home sales were down -1.9 %, and New Home Sales were down -4.7%, albeit from near-record high levels.)
2. Languishing consumer sentiment surveys (which were at 100 pre-pandemic and bottoming at 50 in 2022) have slipped from 80 in Q1/24 and are down to around 68-69.)
3. Slightly lower inflation expectations (1 year from now nudged lower to 3.3%.)
4. But, most interesting is a notable pick-up in U.S. service activity (the PMI services survey jumped to 54.8 from 51.3), which is where the bulk of the inflationary pressure is causing the greatest damage to households and businesses.

“Prejudice is a great time saver. You can form opinions without having to get the facts.” Read More »

“In this new global environment, policymakers, even those previously in the ‘lower forever’ camp…”

Interest rates drive everything, and they are as volatile and directionally uncertain as they’ve ever been. So are the global macroeconomics driving them. Global fund managers are required to make bets on outcomes for stocks, currencies, and commodities based on the cost of money. If perspectives on rates are so dispersed, how can we judge the value of the things that are driven by them?

“In this new global environment, policymakers, even those previously in the ‘lower forever’ camp…” Read More »

“We tend to overestimate the effect of a technology in the short run and underestimate…”

75% of the Perry Capital Portfolio remains AAA-rated, very short maturity, and very liquid securities.
I remain underweight in the equity market because the valuation metrics of risk assets are not discounting for
persistent inflation and a slowing economy to the degree necessary to be attractive. I would rather watch from
the sidelines at 5% until the strategic risk/reward is in my favor.

“We tend to overestimate the effect of a technology in the short run and underestimate…” Read More »