Predictions are something we do for fun around here. That is not how we manage money. We follow strict rules and react to the market we are in, not the market we hope for. And doing so has served us well over the long term…
Monthly Commentary
I wonder if Chairman (of the Federal Reserve Bank) Jerome Powell, reads my commentary. It wasn’t long after last month’s note that Mr. Powell changed his tune on inflation being “transitory” and shifted his stance toward “tapering” the central bank’s bond purchasing program faster than planned…
Monthly Commentary
…prices were spiraling upward, almost out of control.
A vicious cycle was underway: Because prices had been rising rapidly in the recent past, workers demanded ever-higher wages.
As the nation’s central bank, the Federal Reserve was the agency best positioned to try to end that demoralizing cycle, but it would exact a cost…
Monthly Commentary
Monthly Commentary
Monthly Commentary
Monthly Commentary
Monthly Commentary
Monthly Commentary
Monthly Commentary
Monthly Commentary
Monthly Commentary
Monthly Commentary
Monthly Commentary
Monthly Commentary
Monthly Commentary
Monthly Commentary
Monthly Commentary
Monthly Commentary
Monthly Commentary
This morning the monthly jobs numbers came out and the market loved them. The weekly unemployment reports over the past 4 weeks showed an average of 2.5 Million new unemployment claims per week – 2.5 Million x 4 weeks = 10 Million for the month. But, the monthly numbers (which are subject to revision) came in showing that the economy somehow added 2.5 Million jobs in May.
In a word: nonsense.