What If?

posted in: Credit, Economy | 0

Is the U.S. economy strong, weak or just about right?  Better yet, is it getting stronger, weaker or going sideways?  The truth is, pessimists and optimists both can selectively pick and choose to support their own bias. That said, data … Continued

December Payroll Report Ignites Hopes Of Wage Acceleration – How Justified?

posted in: Economy | 0

The last time average hourly earnings of U.S. private-sector employees grew with a three handle was April 2009 … means in the current recovery wages are yet to print growth of three percent.  December came close, with a year-over-year increase … Continued

Fed Set To Set Precedent

posted in: Credit, Economy, Equities | 0

The year’s last FOMC meeting begins today.  Tomorrow, we will probably witness the first rate hike in nine years. On June 29, 2006, the fed funds rate was pushed up by 25 basis points to 5.25 percent, and stayed there … Continued

For Rate-Hike Clues, Focusing On Jobs Trend, Not Just Monthly Numbers

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Today is jobs day.  At 8:30 later this morning, the Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes the report card for September.  A monthly ritual that markets more often than not await with abated breath.  Particularly so this time around as the … Continued

Real Reason Why Tightening Cycle — Regardless When It Begins — Will Be Shallow

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Last week when the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) met, market participants were divided as to whether or not the Fed would raise rates.  Most economists expected a hike, as did the short end of the yield curve; two-year Treasury … Continued

Fed In ‘Heads You Win, Tails I Lose’ Situation

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The Federal Open Market Committee begins its two-day meeting today, the significance of which cannot be stressed enough.  A lot is riding on this.  After this meeting, there will be two more left this year – one late October and … Continued

More And More Older Americans Working Versus Sluggish Consumer Spending

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One of the hallmarks of the current U.S. recovery has been conflicting signals coming out of the job market. The unemployment rate is low – nearly cut in half from 10 percent in October 2009 to 5.1 percent in August.  … Continued

Between Now And Sep FOMC Meeting, How Stocks Act Probably Matters More Than Inflation Or Jobs

posted in: Economy, Equities | 0

Since last Wednesday, there has been a sudden pickup in QE talk.  That was when Bill Dudley, president of the New York Fed, said that “the decision to begin the normalization process at the September FOMC meeting seems less compelling … Continued