Fiscal Policy

“Life is really simple, but we insist on making it complicated.”

Optimism is rising for two main reasons: The U.S. economy and markets are going to continue to improve because Trump’s pro-growth, America-First administrative agenda – which will include tax cuts, deregulation, decreased trade deficits, and, most importantly, reduced government spending – promises to be extremely effective. Investors know it. Confidence has skyrocketed on the part of corporate executives, small businesses, households, students, and… even farmers.

“Life is really simple, but we insist on making it complicated.” 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 »

“It would be premature to conclude with confidence that we have achieved a sufficiently restrictive stance…”

Key economic reports in the upcoming week are various and reasonably important, but Friday’s employment report is the only one that really matters. The Fed’s game plan was to raise interest rates enough to reduce the imbalance in the labor market. But the tightening is really quite marginal compared to the continued stimulus, and it is that stimulus that has been supportive of higher equity valuations and growth. I think the stock market sees this. What it fails to see — for now — is that the stimulus is supporting higher prices.

“It would be premature to conclude with confidence that we have achieved a sufficiently restrictive stance…” Read More »