09/29/2021
Today

Kaplan and Rosengren Are Fall Guys for a Much Bigger Scandal

Editorial, NYS

The big news of the day is the resignation of the presidents of two regional Federal Reserve Banks amid a contretemps over their trading for their own accounts. Eric Rosengren, citing his health, is stepping down as president of the Boston Fed. Robert

What to Do Now in This "Bullwhipped" Market

David Eifrig, American Consequences

The rhythm of this hyper-speculative market is due for a massive correction – here's how to be on the right side of investing history.

How Miami Became Magnet for Silicon Valley Coders

Benjamin Wallace, New York

Awash in coders, crypto, and capital, the city is loving — and beginning to shape — its newest industry.

How the Savvy Are Finding Huge Returns In Magazine Space

Iain Martin, Forbes

Future Media's CEO has used cost-cutting and e-commerce sales to drive the company's stock up 3,800%, in what now looks like a playbook for the entire magazine industry.

Balance, Flexibility Are Keys to Building ESG Confidence

Michael Roman, RCM

Environmental, Social, and Governance - ESG - has been growing in prominence as its application becomes essential to investor decisions and for businesses throughout the world who work to adhere to an evolving array of ESG framework principles. As more stakeholders engage, ESG is playing a decisive role as investments are evaluated and decisions are made which will ultimately affect the returns on those investments and, importantly, the costs and allocation of capital. For multinational firms, especially those publicly held and whose ESGinvestment profiles and operations are already...

The D.C. Spending Swamp Is Back, & Bigger Than Ever

Merrill Matthews, The Hill

The bigger the stakes, the more time and money interested parties are willing to spend. And the stakes have never been bigger.

What Causes Great Societies to Rise, & Then Fall?

Rob Smith, RealClearMarkets

What causes great societies to rise and then fall? What causes them to rise is legal recognition of the sanctity of private property and free and open trade. Doubt me? Let's look at Rome. Roman law was chiseled into marble and granite everywhere. It was written and not arbitrary. When there is fair and equal administration of the law and this law does not impede upon property, the creation of wealth is inevitable. Moreover, so is the concept of happiness. What makes a society happy? Being secure in property and having domain over property is the first step. One is master and ruler over their...

The Purges of the Non-Corona Compliant Have Begun

Jeffrey Tucker, Brownstone

Once the consciousness seeped in and the politicians panicked, we moved quickly from travel restrictions to lockdowns to mask mandates to domestic capacity restrictions to vaccine mandates. Somewhere along the way, we learned to classify people by profession, stigmatize the sick, then finally to demonize the noncompliant. It's been 20 months of intensified controls, driven by political leaders from both parties, with precious little dissent from media organs.

U.S. Needs More Employment-Based Immigrants

David Simon, RealClearMarkets

America needs more "employment-based" immigrants - immigrants in the category that consists mostly of professionals, skilled workers, and persons with "extraordinary" or "exceptional" ability - to do jobs few Americans can do, to start businesses, and to power faster economic growth that will pull more out of poverty and create greater prosperity. In 2017, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine published The Economic and Fiscal Consequences of Immigration, a comprehensive report concerning the impact of immigrants on the U.S. economy. The key findings were that...

Here's What to Know About TSLA's Full Self Driving Mode

Matt McFarland, CNN

A wider group of Tesla owners who paid up to $10,000 for what the company calls its "full self-driving" software can now ask the automaker for access to a test version of the feature. But they'll first have to show that they're a sufficiently safe driver by allowing Tesla to analyze data on their driving behavior.

How We Learned to Stop Worrying, and Love Debt Ceiling

Market Minder, Fisher

Or, how we learned to stop worrying and love the debt ceiling. (Well, maybe "love" is too strong.)

How Biden's Corporate Tax Hike Will Hurt The Middle

Steve Forbes, What's Ahead

Congress is debating a sharp rise in the corporate tax rate, and the Biden Administration claims that these exactions won't affect you, that only big corpora...

Less Government, More Employment

Brian Wesbury & Robert Stein, First Trust Advisors

Questioning Industrial Policy

Scott Lincicome & Huan Zhu, Cato

Seven Unconventional Economic Indicators

Bill McBride, Calculated Risk

These indicators are mostly for travel and entertainment. It will interesting to watch these sectors recover as the pandemic subsides. ...

Leading Indicators Show Optimism For the Economy

Ryan Detrick, LPL Financial

Economic Blog Friday, September 24, 2021

Evergrande's Problems Aren't Everybody's Problems

Pat O'Hare, Briefing.com

There's nothing systemic here.

Early Earnings Releases Signal a Theme

Richard Moody, Regions Bank

What to Do in the Case of Sustained Inflation

James Montier, GMO

We look at various instruments that might be thought to protect your portfolio from an inflationary outcome, whether as an inflation hedge or as a store of value.

Progressive Leaders Eat Cake, The People Suffer

Jennifer Stefano, The Examiner

A picture is worth a thousand words — maybe even 300,000, which was the dollar cost for a table at the Met Gala this year. And there's no denying just how powerful the imagery of that evening was. This year's Met Gala theme was "In America," the irony of which was not lost on most of the nation:…

Speculating On Big Risks That May Be Ahead for Econ

Neil Irwin, New York Times

One concern is that political leaders will mismanage things in the world's largest and second-largest economies.

Biden Is Right: $3.5T Spending Plan Will Cost 'Nothing'

Steve Benen, MSNBC

When the president insists the Democrats' $3.5 trillion plan will cost "nothing," he has a point. It all comes down to net and gross costs.

Dems' Massive Spending Plans Will Blow Up Budget

Brian Riedl, New York Post

"It's going to cost nothing," Biden said of the Democrats' $3.5 trillion spending binge, which House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is scrambling to pass this week.

Biden Has a Lot of Nerve to Lecture About Taxes Paid

Editorial, Issues & Insights

A wealthy president who has apparently avoided his full tax liabilities wants to make sure the rich pay their fair share.

Your Wallet Is In Peril Amid Debt-Ceiling Brinkmanship

Christine Romans, CNN

An epic week in Washington is underway: Congress is contending with budget reconciliation, an infrastructure plan and debt ceiling brinkmanship -- all at once! The outcome remains uncertain, and America's prosperity and wallets are held in the balance.

EV Supporters Are About To Ruin Their Electric Car Plan

David Faris, The Week

As Democrats frantically negotiate the shape of their social spending package with multiple deadlines and economic mayhem looming, they are reportedly considering "means-testing" some of their new programs.

Making a Bipartisan Case For Regulating "Big Tech"

Sen. Cynthia Lummis, The Hill

What concerns me, is that some of the companies serving as the chief enablers of our connected lifestyles and internet access are undermining our privacy rights.

How Peter Thiel Became Most Feared Man In Valley

Eric Spitznagel, New York Post

How the great and powerful Peter Thiel became the most feared man in Silicon Valley.

The Real Stake Over Apple's Remote Work Battle

Shirin Ghaffary & Rani Molla, Vox

Inside the unexpected fight that's dividing the most valuable company in the world.

'Right to Repair' Is Just Common Sense

Ronnie Shows, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The Biden administration has decided to confront the issue of corporate consolidation and antitrust concerns. This must be a priority; too many Americans are being left on the sidelines of our economy because big companies have too much power to operate without fear of government oversight or marketplace competition.

A Modest Proposal to Raise Federal Revenue

William Smith, Washington Examiner

As a way to tackle drug prices, President Joe Biden recently announced that he supports the so-called "inflation rebate," which would require drug companies to give the federal government any revenue from Medicare drug prices above the general rate of inflation. Senate Finance Committee Chairman…

Fisher Investments on Election-Year Uncertainty: This, Too, Shall Pass

Fisher Investments Editorial Staff, Fisher Investments

Will Uncle Sam Force Big Tech to Break Up?

Fisher Investments Editorial Staff, Fisher Investments

Shattering the Debt Ceiling Myth

Fisher Investments Editorial Staff, Fisher Investments

Two Investor Perils: Big and Bad Governments

John Rekenthaler, Morningstar

The latter is worse, but neither are helpful.

Stocks Don't Have To Crash To Get Cheap

Jonathan Clements, HumbleDollar

Stocks could tread water for five years.

A Look Into Deeper Meaning of 'Non-Profit' Hospitals

Casey Carlisle, UncleNap

How could billions in revenues be non-profit?

The Broken Clock

Nick Maggiulli, Of Dollars And Data

On survivorship bias in the financial industry and why failed predictions still don't matter.

More Women = Higher Returns.

Jessica Hamlin, Institutional Investor

"The higher the female representation across the companies we cover the better share price returns we have observed since 2010," said Eugène Klerk, Credit Suisse's head of global ESG research.

Your Portfolio Is Your Problem. I Just Don't Care

J.C. Parets, All Star Charts

The best lessons are learned the hard way. That's just the way life goes. One of the most important things I've come to understand about markets, and life, is that you have to worry about yourself first.

Why Did These Public Companies Get Free PPP Loans?

Lydia DePillis, ProPublica

At least 120 publicly traded companies that received large PPP loans grew their revenues last year and have been allowed to keep the money anyway, according to a ProPublica analysis. The program was built to help small businesses.
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