Notes on the Week Ahead - podcast cover

Notes on the Week Ahead

Dr. David Kellyam.jpmorgan.com
Listen to the latest insights from Dr. David Kelly, Chief Global Strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset Management to help prepare you for the week ahead.
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Episodes

Sizing up the angles on Fed policy

I am shockingly, comically bad at golf. However, that doesn’t stop me from occasionally watching more gifted souls play the game. One of their techniques is to examine a putt from multiple perspectives. They take a careful look at the green as they come up to mark their ball, look at the putt from the side, squat down to consider it from the opposite direction, and generally scout out the lay of the land from all angles. For myself, since I’m generally wielding the putter playing my seventh or e...

May 22, 202311 minEp. 220

Slow-Motion Slowdown

Across the economy, the outlook is for slower growth. Slower growth in demand, in employment, in profits and in inflation. Recession is by no means certain. However, a slow-growing economy is rather like a slow-moving bicycle – the slower its moves, the easier it is to topple it over. And so, in the spring of 2023, there is a significant risk of recession starting before the end of the year.

May 15, 20239 minEp. 219

Debt-Ceiling Cliff Dancing

On Ireland’s Atlantic seaboard, ten miles west of the town of Lisdoonvarna, stand the majestic Cliffs of Moher. They are a popular tourist attraction but also a dangerous one – in the 25 years ended in 2017, 66 people tragically plunged over the cliffs to their death. Of course, there is no reason why anyone should meet such a fate. The long grassy path beside the cliffs is bounded by a wire fence, with frequent signs warning visitors not to cross it or to venture any closer to the cliffs. Howev...

May 01, 202313 minEp. 218

When Money Stops Talking

The quantity of money was a big issue in the background of my childhood. There were no money machines or credit cards (at least in our house). So every Monday, my father would write a check for cash, usually for less than 100 pounds, and hand it to my mother for housekeeping for the week. She would then drive to the bank, cash it, put the notes in her purse and slowly dole them out as the days went by and she tried to keep a family of seven fed. Throughout the week, as she shopped and worried, s...

Apr 24, 202313 minEp. 217

The Road Back to 2% Inflation

It seems like a distant memory now, but in the decade before the pandemic, the main preoccupation of the Federal Reserve was boosting inflation, as measured by the headline personal consumption deflator, to 2%. Inflation undershot this target in ten of the twelve years between 2008 and 2019.

Apr 17, 20239 minEp. 216

The Real Threat to Dollar Dominance

Eliud Kipchoge, the only man to ever run a marathon in under two hours, is in town for next week’s Boston Marathon. In the runup to the race, reporters will no doubt ask him about whether he is worried about any particular competitor. He will predictably reply that he is not - but that he has to focus on his own fitness and his own decisions in running the race. As with all individual sports, the keys to success or failure lie largely in the athlete’s own hands.

Apr 10, 20238 minEp. 215

The Recessionary Price of a Faster Decline in Inflation

In three weeks, I will once again have the honor of running the Boston Marathon as a member of the gasping geezers division of the Dana-Farber Marathon Challenge team. A year ago, as I clambered up the Newton Hills, I resolved that, if I was ever fool enough to do this again, I’d lose a few pounds before attempting it. Admittedly, a few miles later, I made a sterner vow that I would never be fool enough to do this again, which made the first resolution seem irrelevant.

Mar 28, 202311 minEp. 214

The Economic Impact of Banking Turmoil

A good set of brakes is a very comforting thing. A gentle tap of the foot should produce a quiet and gentle deceleration, as brake pads press up against disc rotors, in a smooth but firm action. When I drive these days, I take this technology for granted. However, the vehicles I drove as a young man offered far less assurance. There were times when applying the brakes unleashed a cacophony of shrieking, squealing and grinding noises as worn-out pads battled with rusty rotors. The braking action ...

Mar 20, 202310 minEp. 213

The Investment Implications of a Demographic Bounce

One obstacle to assessing the direction of the American economy is the difficulty in getting a handle on how many people live in this country and how fast that number is growing. It would seem to be a very elementary problem – surely the Census Bureau provides timely data on the size of the population, as well as births, deaths and net migration? But it does not. So far as I know, there is no official consistent measure of any of these numbers on a monthly, (or for that matter an annual basis), ...

Mar 06, 20239 minEp. 212

Investing Beyond The Profit Squeeze

Over the years, my standard approach to analyzing corporate profits has been to think of them as the last slice taken from a big national income pie. The growth of the pie itself is important. But so is the size of the other slices, such as labor costs, interest costs and corporate taxes. Once every one else has had their slice, what’s left over is corporate profits. It’s a useful model for analytical purposes. However, it has one glaring flaw, namely that it assigns to corporations a purely pas...

Feb 27, 20239 minEp. 211

A Seasonal Surge (and its Implications for Jobs, Growth, Inflation and Rates)

It was 60 degrees in Acton yesterday, as our normally frigid Massachusetts winter continued to be a no-show. Not that I have any problem with this, since running, rather than skiing, is my exercise of choice. But this weirdly mild season is leaving nature very confused with streams gurgling, buds swelling and birds twittering loudly, presumably about their nest-building plans.

Feb 22, 20238 minEp. 210

The Lurking Slowdown

There is a slowdown lurking. It is currently hiding so well, in the long grass of statistical anomaly, that many observers, including the Federal Reserve, don’t seem to notice it at all. However, investors need to recognize it and have a clear view on the outlook for economic growth, jobs, inflation and profits, how the Federal Reserve may react to a slowdown, and what this could mean for investment returns over the next few years.

Feb 06, 202312 minEp. 209

A Turning Point for the Economy

In investing, as in life, it is important to learn from the past, appreciate the present and plan for the future. This is particularly true at turning points. In the early weeks of the New Year, we do appear to be at an economic turning point. Fourth-quarter GDP and consumption deflator data, due out this week, may give the impression of continued solid growth with still strong year-over-year inflation. However, a more real-time assessment of the economy suggests a significant cooling in both, w...

Jan 23, 202310 minEp. 208

Debt-Ceiling Danger

Last Friday afternoon, amidst the lengthening shadows of a winter sun, the Treasury Secretary delivered an ominous warning: By this Thursday, the U.S. federal debt will reach its legal limit, requiring her to take extraordinary measures just to keep paying the bills. Secretary Yellen’s warning was, perhaps, a little premature and she suggested that, with some adjustments, our real rendezvous with disaster might be postponed until June. But even this date is considerably earlier than many assumed...

Jan 17, 202311 minEp. 207

Resolution and Confidence

The word “resolution” has multiple meanings. The most obvious at this time of the year, is a decision to behave differently going forward. In many social sciences, “resolution” refers to a problem that is somehow mitigated or eliminated. Or, taken at its most literal, “resolution” could simply mean coming up with new answers to old questions – that is to say – “re-solving” them.

Jan 03, 20238 minEp. 206

The Challenged Consumer

My first job out of graduate school, in the early 1990s, was as the consumer economist for the economic consulting firm of DRI/McGraw-Hill, in Lexington, Massachusetts. One weekend each month, we would run a U.S. macroeconomic forecast. (It always had to be over the weekend, as this was the only time when we could get our own clients off our mainframe computer.) Anyway, on Saturday afternoon, having produced some preliminary numbers, we would gather around a huge conference-room table and discus...

Dec 19, 202210 minEp. 205

The Investment Implications of the Oil Slide

At his press conference on November 2nd, Fed Chairman, Jay Powell opined that the window for a soft landing had narrowed. This was very much in line with his messaging for many months which has emphasized that the Fed regards inflation as being much too high and is willing to put the economy in recession, if necessary, to return it to its 2% target. However, it also underscores the economic problem caused by “supply-shock” inflation: it simultaneously boosts inflation expectations, inducing a mo...

Dec 12, 20229 minEp. 204

Redhotnot – The Investment Implications of the Job Market Mosaic

At 8:30AM, on the first Friday of every month, the Labor Department releases the monthly jobs report. By 8:35AM, the network scriptwriters deliver a verdict to the teleprompters – jobs either “sky rocketed” or “plunged”. The job market is either “red hot” or “stalling out” and, either way, investors need to be worried. No middle ground will keep an audience.

Dec 05, 202210 minEp. 203

The Investment Implications of the Housing Slump

For many people, I suspect, 2022 will be a year to forget. However, for millions of home-builders, home-sellers and home-buyers, it will be remembered for the speed with which a housing boom turned into a housing bust. The reason, of course, has been a surge in mortgage rates. These rates look likely to stay high, at least over the next year, contributing to sharp declines in housing starts and home sales and a negative impact on GDP. Eventually, this could motivate the Federal Reserve to revers...

Nov 22, 20227 minEp. 202

Recession Risks: Standing on the Edge of a Swamp

Markets bounced higher last week in a justifiable show of enthusiasm as the latest CPI data confirmed that inflation is indeed receding. However, even as investors worry less about inflation they may well worry more about recession. The risk of a near-term recession is climbing. However, such a recession would be more like sliding into an economic swamp than falling off an economic cliff. While a “swamp” recession wouldn’t be very deep, the economy would likely struggle to get out of it. The goo...

Nov 15, 202210 minEp. 201

The Market-Moving Menu of Data and Events

Among the many challenges of parenthood is trying to get your kids to eat healthy food. As the children get older, the school lunchroom becomes one of battlefields, with some kind of weekly menu posted online or sent home with the kids. Many of these menus appear to imply that the three essential food groups are sodium, fat and sugar. However, some schools employ a little more imagination both in providing healthy choices and evoking some interest in the fare to come. This week the lunchrooms in...

Oct 31, 202211 minEp. 200

Lifting the Fog of Uncertainty on Growth, Inflation, Politics and Rates

At the peak of the railroad boom of the late 19th century, the Framingham and Lowell line was incorporated to transport goods and passengers up and down the western outskirts of Boston. Over the years, the traffic dwindled, the line was sold and resold and eventually abandoned. However, for more than three decades now, some enterprising local citizens have pursued the construction of a bike trail along the old abandoned line, which is now, finally, mostly complete.

Oct 24, 202210 minEp. 199

The Monetary Implications of Fiscal Drag

On many occasions in my adult life, I have made New Year’s resolutions to become fitter. As the days of the old year gradually dwindled and my girth gradually expanded, I would commit myself to exercise more and eat less. However, experience has taught me that both of these noble aspirations must be approached with moderation. Any attempt to starve myself while running more miles leads inevitably to physical slowdown or breakdown. Moreover, if I simply refuse to eat more, the exercise comes to a...

Oct 17, 202210 minEp. 198

The Slope of the Inflation Slide

The Federal Reserve maintains strict rules prohibiting FOMC members from commenting on the economic outlook or monetary policy in the 10 days preceding an FOMC meeting or on the following day. Thereafter they are free to speak and over the last two weeks many have opined on both subjects. Their opinions show remarkable unanimity. They are focused on bringing inflation back down to their 2% target. They acknowledge the uncertainty in the economic outlook, and, as a consequence, they profess thems...

Oct 10, 20228 minEp. 197

The Recession that Didn’t Bark

A famous Sherlock Holmes story concerns the abduction of a race horse and a guard dog that didn’t bark. For those who haven’t read the story, I’ll skip over the reason for the dog’s silence. The point is he didn’t bark – no alarm was raised – no actions were taken - and the horse disappeared. Entering the fourth quarter of 2022, the U.S. economy is teetering on the edge of recession. However, it is a recession that has been delayed and potentially softened by an excess demand for labor, the lack...

Oct 03, 20229 minEp. 196

The Scales of Fundamentals and Price

In weighing the value of any security, the scales of financial markets are supposed to maintain a fine balance between fundamentals and price. The plate of fundamental factors is piled high with macro trends, geopolitical issues, weather and environmental events, policy decisions and individual security attributes. The other plate is far more sparsely occupied – price stands alone, accounting for half of any assessment of the opportunity and risk in the purchase of an asset.

Sep 26, 20228 minEp. 195

Why the Fed should worry less about sticky inflation (but probably won’t)

When future historians reflect upon the current age, they might call it “the worry years”. As America emerges from the pandemic, there are still serious health concerns, a yawning political divide, rising autocracy around the world, a brutal war in Europe and the highest inflation in 40 years. Moreover, anxiety triggered by these genuine problems is being amplified by cable channels and social media which ever more efficiently gather their audience by appealing to fear and outrage....

Sep 20, 202212 minEp. 194

Job Openings, Recession Risks and Prospects for a Fed Reversal

On Saturday, Sari and I made our annual pilgrimage to Kimballs for lobster roll. Kimball Farm, which started as an ice-cream stand in Westford, Massachusetts, has ballooned into a huge enterprise over the years and there was a big crowd lined up in front of us when we arrived. Undaunted, we traced our way to the back of the line and hoped it would move fast. It did not.

Sep 06, 20228 minEp. 193

The Investment Implications of Jackson Hole

Whatever else anyone may say about Jay Powell’s much-awaited speech in Jackson Hole, it had two distinct virtues. It was clear and it was brief, running to just 1,300 well-chosen words. In the same spirit, and despite a sharp 1,008 point slide in the Dow Jones Industrial Average on Friday, it is important to be succinct in discussing both where the economy is and potential Fed policy going forward. For additional insights from Dr. David Kelly, listen to the Insights Now podcast ....

Aug 31, 20226 minEp. 192

A Line in the Sand on Inflation

The phrase “drawing a line in the sand” has an unhappy history. In the U.S., it is said to have originated with Colonel William B. Travis, who drew a line in the sand at the Alamo declaring his willingness to fight and die rather than surrender. In 2008, following the takeover of Bear Stearns earlier that year, federal authorities drew a line in the sand and let Lehman Brothers go bankrupt. And in recent weeks, Fed officials have seemed to draw a line in the sand on inflation. For the podbeam de...

Aug 22, 202210 minEp. 191
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