MV Weekly Market Flash: Let A Thousand Scenarios Bloom
Read More From MVHow bad could it get? That is the question on the minds of many investors as the war in the Middle East slogs on with no apparent clarity about, well, anything. Let’s do a quick check-in to see where we are as of this somewhat rainy Friday morning in the Washington, DC environs where we ply our trade. When In Doubt, Equivocate The S&P 500 stock index has lost around 7.2 percent of its value from its last record high, on January 27, to its close on Thursday. That is considerable, but the index has yet to cross either of...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Push and Pull in the Bond Market
Read More From MVThis is not stagflation! Or so Jay Powell insisted, during the Wednesday press conference this week following the Federal Open Market Committee meeting that, as widely expected, kept US policy rates on hold at present levels. Stagflation was a thing we had to deal with, very harshly, in 1979, when turmoil in Iran was just one of many factors fanning the flames of consumer inflation. Paul Volcker’s Fed had to raise the Fed funds rate, ultimately to as high as 20 percent, to corral inflation and reinvigorate the economy’s potential to grow. Anything less than the experience of 1979-80, in...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: The Least Useful CPI Report Ever
Read More From MVOn Wednesday this week the Bureau of Labor Statistics released the Consumer Price Index report for February. Economists had been expecting to see a year-on-year increase of around 2.4 percent in the headline inflation number, with an attendant gain of 2.5 percent in core CPI, excluding the volatile categories of energy and food. That is more or less what happened. But it happened last month; in other words, before a series of air strikes by the US and Israel had the effect of shutting down the passage of shipping traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. As a refresher from last...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: The Menace of Stagflation
Read More From MVExactly one week ago, the Bureau of Labor Statistics published its January report for wholesale prices, showing a 3.6 percent year-on-year rise in the Producer Price Index, much larger than economists had expected. Today, the same Bureau of Labor Statistics issued its monthly jobs report noting, rather coyly, that nonfarm payrolls had “edged down” by 92,000 in February. Now, perhaps whoever edits the BLS report wanted to soften the delivery of bad news for whatever delicate sensibilities might be perusing the jobs numbers, but a decline of 92,000, when economists had been expecting a gain of 60,000, is not “edging...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Japan Rises, Again
Read More From MVWhen Commodore Matthew Perry sailed into what is now Tokyo Bay in July 1853, the Industrial Revolution had already been galvanizing Western economies for a half century. Japan, by contrast, was an isolated feudal backwater, intentionally cut off from the rest of the world since the beginning of the Tokugawa Shogunate in 1603. Faced with the obvious technical superiority of the West as they stared down the cannon barrels of Perry’s Black Ships, Japan’s leaders realized that nothing short of a far-reaching transformation away from the ossified practices of the ruling samurai class was going to be required. Via the...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: The Last Time Non-US Ruled the Roost
Read More From MVThe rotation out of US equities is into its second year and going strong. The rest of the world may be having its share of problems, but underperforming stocks is not one of them. Here is a brief snapshot of how things are going in other parts of the globe, relative to the flattish ways of the S&P 500 thus far. This got us to thinking about the last time non-US equities gripped the imagination and enthusiasm of the investing crowd. Let’s take a little trip back to the quaint world of this century’s first decade. Swan Song for the...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: More Questions Than Answers in the Jobs Market
Read More From MVWhat’s going on in the US jobs market? Over the past couple weeks, we have received a deluge of data points about job openings, layoffs, payroll gains and – the one most people think of when someone says “labor market” – the benchmark unemployment rate. What this truckload of data has not done, though, is offer a clear picture of the current state of the labor market. Oh, and then there is one more data point, which is the tanking stock prices of a whole bunch of companies that was the subject of our commentary last week and which has...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: The Everything Pullback
Read More From MVSilver and gold, silver and gold, sang Burl Ives as the Claymation snowman Sam in Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer (apologies, sort of, for the earworm). Anyone who bought silver and/or gold a couple weeks ago is probably not singing a merry tune this week, as the price of these precious metals commenced a precipitous plummet last Friday that has continued into this week. The gold bugs can at least take comfort in the fact that they’re not alone. A wide swath of folks from crypto enthusiasts to lovers of software-as-a-service companies and hyperscale AI titans are feeling an unusual amount...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: A Drama-Free Week at the Eccles Building
Read More From MVIt is something of a rarity when a single week contains both a policy meeting by the Federal Open Market Committee and the announcement of a selection for the next Fed chair – and that same week winds up being one of the most boring and least drama-filled in recent memory. After weeks of theatrics around the current dramatis personae of the Fed and their interest rate decisions or their office renovations or the minutiae of their personal mortgage applications, with page after page of financial media op-eds breathlessly debating the existential precariousness of an independent central bank and its...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Polymarket for the Polycrisis
Read More From MVImagine if they had Polymarket and Kalshi 150 years ago. What a time the speculators of the day would have had! In 1876, major disturbances broke out all over the Balkans as people rose up, in a generally sporadic and uncoordinated fashion, against their nominal overlords running the Ottoman Empire. An uprising in Bulgaria was particularly brutal as a small band of nationalists was crushed by Ottoman troops and massacred in grisly fashion. These disturbances worried the Great Powers of the day, with Russia and newly-united Germany in particular swooping in to either try and restore order or grab a...
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