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LA Ports: Imports and Exports Down YoY in October; Exports Down YoY for 11th Consecutive Month

Calculated Risk -

Container traffic gives us an idea about the volume of goods being exported and imported - and usually some hints about the trade report since LA area ports handle about 40% of the nation's container port traffic.
The following graphs are for inbound and outbound traffic at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach in TEUs (TEUs: 20-foot equivalent units or 20-foot-long cargo container).

The first graph is the monthly data (with a strong seasonal pattern for imports).

LA Area Port TrafficClick on graph for larger image.

Usually imports peak in the July to October period as retailers import goods for the Christmas holiday and then decline sharply and bottom in the Winter depending on the timing of the Chinese New Year.  
Imports were down 12.5% YoY in October, and exports were down 5.1% YoY.    
To remove the strong seasonal component for inbound traffic, the second graph shows the rolling 12-month average.

LA Area Port TrafficOn a rolling 12-month basis, inbound traffic decreased 1.2% in September compared to the rolling 12 months ending the previous month.   
Outbound traffic decreased 0.5% compared to the rolling 12 months ending the previous month.
This is the 11th consecutive month with exports down YoY.

California October Home Sales "Highest Level Since February"; 4th Look at Local Markets

Calculated Risk -

Today, in the Calculated Risk Real Estate Newsletter: California October Home Sales "Highest Level Since February"; 4th Look at Local Markets

A brief excerpt:
From the California Association of Realtors® (C.A.R.): California home sales hit highest level since February, C.A.R. reports
California home sales rose in October from both the prior month and a year ago to reach the highest level since February, the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.) said today.

Closed escrow sales of existing, single-family detached homes in California totaled a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 282,590 in October, according to information collected by C.A.R. from more than 90 local REALTOR® associations and MLSs statewide. The statewide annualized sales figure represents what would be the total number of homes sold during 2025 if sales maintained the October pace throughout the year. It is adjusted to account for seasonal factors that typically influence home sales.

October home sales edged up 1.9 percent from 277,410 in September to 282,590 in October. Home sales improved 4.1 percent from a revised 271,370 recorded a year earlier.
There is much more in the article.

Navigating The Curve: The Allure And Risks Of Long-Dated US Treasuries

Zero Hedge -

Navigating The Curve: The Allure And Risks Of Long-Dated US Treasuries

Authored by Mario Eisenegger via BondVigilantes.com,

Compared to a year ago, the US Treasury curve has steepened considerably.

While yields at the front end have dropped due to anticipated rate cuts, the long end of the curve has not budged.

In fact, long-end bonds have sold off, giving bond investors the opportunity to lock in elevated yields.

That’s quite a tempting thought, considering we’re talking about the US, which sets the global reference rate for many asset classes.

Source: Bloomberg, 31 October 2025

In economies where GDP growth is constrained by high levels of debt and unfavourable demographics, governments either need to hope for a productivity boom or be prudent with spending plans to keep debt-to-GDP metrics in check. Achieving the latter can be challenging given the pressures of rising geopolitical tensions and the structural incentives in democratic systems that often prioritise short-term spending commitments during election cycles. This, in turn, increases the odds of inflation playing a larger role in achieving fiscal sustainability in the future.

In a world of financial repression, an opportunity to lock in positive real yields at 2-2.5% is worth considering. But, it is not a slam dunk.

Below, we share are a few concerns that keep us on the sidelines for now.

Risk one: absence of productivity boom

Running fiscal deficits when yields are high and debt-to-GDP levels are elevated can be  risky business. The US is currently doing just that which explains why the bond market has revalued the compensation it demands for owning long-dated US Treasuries. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) sees federal debt rise from 100% to 118% of GDP by 2035, reporting the highest point in US history.

Source: Congressional Budget Office

Earlier this year, Deutsche Bank calculated the budget deficit the US must maintain to stabilise its debt metrics. According to their calculations, the US would need to run a primary budget deficit-to-GDP ratio that is no larger than 1.2% to keep debt-to-GDP stable over the long run. With the fiscal package estimated to keep budget deficits as a share of GDP between 5% and 7% over the next few years, deficits of that size look unsustainable in the absence of a productivity boom. Hopes for productivity gains through AI are high. If the story holds up and the much-hoped-for productivity gains materialise, then the US fiscal situation could suddenly look much brighter. Having said that, the CBO also notes that if productivity growth is 0.5% slower per year compared to their baseline assumption, debt could surge to over 200% of GDP by 2055. This highlights how sensitive debt assumptions are, increasing the risk of policy errors that could  lead to further repricing of long-dated US bonds.

Risk two: erosion of Fed independence

In August, President Trump attempted to remove Lisa Cook from the Fed’s board of governors, citing allegations that she falsified records to obtain favourable terms on a mortgage before joining the central bank in 2022. Although the Supreme Court ruled that Cook, who is perceived as a hawkish board member, could remain in her position temporarily, Trump’s move could indicate an attempt to increase his influence over the Fed. The Fed may face repeated pressure if its monetary policies do not align with the White House’s political priorities. Jerome Powell’s term as Federal Reserve chair ends in May 2026, and Trump has stated that he will not nominate “Too-Late” Powell for another term. A new Fed chair might take a more dovish stance, increasing the risk that the Fed opts for lower interest rates to stimulate economic growth. One can argue that the US economy has become more resilient, given that 81% of GDP is now service-oriented, which tends to solve for smoother economic cycles. Cutting rates in a weakening but still growing economy, where inflation hovers above the Fed’s target, is risky business and may lead investors to demand higher long-term interest rates.

Risk three: tariff income might be deemed illegal

The president used a 1977 emergency law to impose tariffs on goods from over 100 countries. On the back of that, tariff revenues have grown for months, and the latest data shows that the US has collected $223.9 billion from them as of 31st October which is $142.2 billion more than the same time last year. This month, the US Supreme Court began hearing cases that could rule certain tariffs and their corresponding revenue streams illegal. These developments could worsen the US fiscal situation and bring the fiscal challenge back into the limelight, likely leading to higher term premium. I consider this likely to be a short term impact, as the Trump administration will probably  find new ways to enact tariffs.

Risk four: shift away from T-Bill heavy funding profile

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has signalled a preference to avoid locking the government into higher borrowing costs when bills are cheaper. Just a few days ago the US Treasury confirmed this by indicating in its quarterly refinancing statement that it does not plan to increase sales of notes and bonds until well into next year and will rely more heavily on bills, which mature in up to one year, to fund the budget deficit. T-bills currently comprise 20% of the US debt held by the public. The Treasury has acknowledged that this reliance reduces expected costs while also increasing volatility of its funding profile. This trade-off is highly sensitive to baseline economic forecasts. While the current funding mix is appropriate in a “productivity boom” scenario, other scenarios highlight additional risks. Interestingly, their model suggests that a reduction in bill issuance in favour of mid-duration issuance could lower volatility for a negligible increase in costs in adverse scenarios. Thus, the odds of a shift away from a T-bill-heavy funding profile might be higher than many believe.

While the positive real yields offered by long-dated US Treasuries are tempting, we await the resolution of some of the uncertainties discussed to strengthen our conviction. For now, we consider positive real yields more attractive in other market areas where we have greater confidence in the direction of long-dated yields.

Tyler Durden Tue, 11/18/2025 - 12:05

Sen. Graham Touts Movement On New Russian Sanctions Bill 'With Trump's Blessing'

Zero Hedge -

Sen. Graham Touts Movement On New Russian Sanctions Bill 'With Trump's Blessing'

Sen. Lindsey Graham announced Monday the Senate is taking up legislation that would sanction Russia's trading partners, in order to ramp up the pressure on Moscow to end the war with Ukraine.

The announcement came after President Donald Trump told reporters Sunday night the proposed legislation would be "OK with me" - which marked his strongest signal yet that he's planning on signing off on it.

Graham, a Russia hawk (and pretty much hawkish on all other conflicts and official US 'enemies' in the world) unveiled the move forward on the legislation "with President Trump’s blessing."

via AP

He described the necessity of yet more sanctions in order to "continue the momentum to end this war honorably, justly and once and for all."

"This legislation is designed to give President Trump more flexibility and power to push Putin to the peace table by going after both Putin and countries like Iran that support him," Graham wrote. "I appreciate the strong bipartisan support for this legislation in both the House of Representatives and the Senate."

"The Senate will move soon on a tough sanctions bill — not only against Russia — but also against countries like China and India that buy Russian energy products that finance Putin’s war machine," Graham additionally stated. "The Senate bill has a presidential waiver to give President Trump maximum leverage."

"When it comes to Putin and those who support his war machine, it is time to change the game," he continued. Further, Graham again verified that Trump "is looking at [the bill] very strongly." But Trump wants the ultimate final say-so:

Graham and Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), a co-sponsor of the bill, worked to include the presidential waiver to satisfy a White House request to give Trump more optionsaccording to Politico.

US media is framing this as part of Trump "losing patience" with Putin over ending the war; however, the reality remains that Kiev and its Western backers have been unwilling to offer territorial concessions. Finally ceding Crimea hasn't even been on the table.

"We get a lot of bullshit thrown at us by Putin, if you want to know the truth," Trump recently told reporters. "He’s very nice all the time, but it turns out to be meaningless." And Graham responded to Trump's words by saying the president "is spot on about the games Putin is playing."

Lately, amid a 'civil war' in MAGA-land in the wake of the Tucker Carlson and Nick Fuentes interview, many of Trump's supporters have vehemently complained that Trump is too much in neocon Lindsey Graham's corner on foreign policy. His administration certainly didn't start off like that.

Tyler Durden Tue, 11/18/2025 - 11:45

10 Frequently Asked Questions About CBO's Approach to Transparency

CBO -

Transparency is an aspect of CBO's work that the agency continually strives to improve—and one about which it often receives questions. CBO's Director addresses some of the most common questions about the agency's approach to transparency.

Categories -

AI "Circle Jerk" Rages On: Microsoft, Nvidia Invest $15 Billion In Anthropic

Zero Hedge -

AI "Circle Jerk" Rages On: Microsoft, Nvidia Invest $15 Billion In Anthropic

Two months ago, when nobody was talking about the coming AI debt tsunami needed to bankroll trillions in data-center capex, and nobody was paying attention to Oracle's CDS quietly blow out, and well ahead of the Bank of England's AI valuation warning, we published "The Stunning Math Behind The AI Vendor Financing "Circle Jerk," essentially laying out all the weakest links in the swelling global AI bubble.

In the report, we laid out the ridiculous circle-jerk vendor financing schemes concocted by the handful of top players to pretend their revenue is growing at a rapid pace. We also called it an "infinite money glitch"...

Most notably, the players.

Fast-forward to Tuesday: the AI bubble keeps deflating, hyperscalers are under pressure, Bitcoin trading in the $92k range, and Microsoft and Amazon were just downgraded to neutral by Rothschild & Co. and Redburn's Alexander Haissl. Now comes fresh news from Microsoft and Nvidia, attempting to revive the AI hype with yet another round of circle-jerking. 

Bloomberg reports Microsoft and Nvidia will invest up to $15 billion in Anthropic. As part of the agreement, Anthropic will purchase $30 billion of compute from Microsoft's Azure, which only confirms more circle-jerking

"We are increasingly going to be customers of each other — we will use Anthropic models, they will use our infrastructure, and we will go to market together," Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella stated in a video, adding, "Of course, this all builds on the partnership we have with OpenAI, which remains a critical partner for Microsoft."

To support the AI-infrastructure buildout, Anthropic plans to spend $50 billion building AI data centers across multiple states. The AI company is simultaneously partnered with Google, which agreed in October to supply up to 1 million AI chips. 

Earlier, analyst Haissl warned that the bullish case around generative AI is no longer clear and hyperscalers should be approached with caution

He noted the industry's "trust us - Gen-AI is just like early cloud 1.0" pitch is flawed and that the underlying economics are far weaker than assumed.

Building on Haissl's warning, we've been very early in covering Oracle's CDS blowout, even offering warnings about AI debt and valuations well before the Bank of England

Bad news for the AI stocks. 

As we've previously joked. 

Morgan Stanley analysts need to add Anthropic to the circle jerking.

Harris Kupperman, CIO of Praetorian Capital, posted the following on X,

Love how shareholders look at this deal, realize that this guarantees big losses for years into the future, and sell them like they're shale shit-cos promising to raise production in a $50 oil environment. Welcome to 2016 tech bros. The multiple compression is only just starting...

Rihard Jarc, co-founder and CIO of New Era Funds, pointed out that multiple narratives are converging in the Microsoft-Nvidia-Anthropic partnership:

So many narratives are at play here in the Microsoft-Nvidia-Anthropic partnership:

  1. Nvidia saw Anthropic do a deal with Google's TPUs and Amazon's Trainium, so it had to ensure Anthropic stays committed to Nvidia hardware.

  2. Microsoft is signaling that its future isn't dependent on OpenAI alone.

  3. Anthropic is showing investors it can line up splashy partnerships and meaningful letter-of-intent orders.

  4. And all of them timed this announcement to land on the same day as Google's Gemini 3.0 release - because if Google wins the frontier-model race decisively, all three would feel the pressure.

How does all this end? Trump's AI advisor, David Sacks may have offered a clue: "There will be no federal bailout for AI. The U.S. has at least five major frontier-model companies. If one fails, others will take its place."

Tyler Durden Tue, 11/18/2025 - 11:30

China's Oil Stockpiling Accelerated In October

Zero Hedge -

China's Oil Stockpiling Accelerated In October

Authored by Irina Slav via OilPrice.com,

China stockpiled crude oil at elevated rates in October, at a daily rate of some 690,000 barrels, up from 570,000 barrels daily in September, Reuters’ Clyde Russell reported today, citing calculations derived from official Beijing data.

Refinery throughput in October averaged 14.94 million barrels daily, the official data showed, while imports ran at a rate of 11.39 million barrels daily, Russell reported.

The refinery throughput figure was a 6.4% increase on the year, suggesting healthy demand for oil, but it was also a decline on September’s 15.26 million bpd average.

The September figure was a two-year high.

Imports, meanwhile, averaged 11.39 million barrels daily in October, adding to local production of 4.24 million barrels daily for a total daily supply rate of 15.63 million barrels.

The difference between supply and demand, as based on refinery runs, is assumed to be going into storage, although some of it might be processed by small refineries that are not included in the official data, Russell notes in his regular reports on the state of China’s oil market.

This stockpiling on the part of China has become a major reason for the relative stability of oil prices.

It is based on the rather reasonable assumption that if China, the world’s largest oil importer, has built a supply cushion in case of disruption, then a surge in demand following such a disruption is unlikely. This assumption has acted as one more lid on prices, along with regular reports about electric vehicles replacing internal combustion engines in the world’s biggest car market.

Over the first ten months of the year, China was stockpiling crude at a daily rate of 900,000 barrels, the Reuters report also said, giving a rather comfortable size to that supply cushion in case of disruption, such as the latest U.S. sanctions on Russia’s Rosneft and Lukoil.

Tyler Durden Tue, 11/18/2025 - 11:00

Callaway Sells Struggling Topgolf To Los Angeles Private Equity

Zero Hedge -

Callaway Sells Struggling Topgolf To Los Angeles Private Equity

We raised the question back in 2023: was the Topgolf mania just another consumer hype bubble?

Turns out that may have been the case. Topgolf Callaway Brands had been trying to unload or spin off the Topgolf unit for some time, and now they have.

Bloomberg reports that Callaway has sold a 60% stake in its Topgolf and Toptracer division to Leonard Green & Partners in a deal valuing the business at about $1.1 billion. This means the 60% stake will generate about $770 million for Callaway. 

Callaway originally acquired Topgolf in 2020 for about $2 billion. After the sale closes in 1Q26, the company will rebrand itself as Callaway Golf Company under the ticker "CALY" and refocus on its core golf equipment brands, stepping away from the struggling golf-experience chain.

In September, Golf Digest published a report based on conversations with former Topgolf executives Devin Charhon and Michael Canfield, revealing that Topgolf never achieved a stable flow of returning customers (cost was a major factor).

The former execs left the company to start Blue Jeans, which created the "Golf Ranch" brand, modernizing aging driving ranges and making it more of an actual practice facility for golfers rather than the Togolf experience of fancy screens and lights. It turns out golfers just want to practice.  

Well, that wasn't as planned. 

Golf Ranch sounds more reasonable. 

Tyler Durden Tue, 11/18/2025 - 10:40

The Boundaries Dividing Political, Monetary, Fiscal, Trade And Other Policies Are Gone

Zero Hedge -

The Boundaries Dividing Political, Monetary, Fiscal, Trade And Other Policies Are Gone

By Michael Every of Rabobank

The Polycene and the Monocene

For over a decade our global strategy has warned the ‘liberal world order’ would collapse. Now, the New York Times’ Tom Friedman, in ‘Welcome to Our New Era. What Do We Call It?’, shares that “For the past few years, I have had to ask myself a question I never asked before in my life: What should we call the era we’re living in today?” He’s running with ‘The Polycene’, which in Greek means “There’s so much going on that a ‘Monocene’ focus on data won’t help.”

In markets stocks, tech, crypto, and even gold are down. Japanese 20-year JGB yields just hit the highest since 1999, prompting a meeting at 15:30 Japan time today between PM Takaichi and BOJ Governor Ueda – but what can be done endogenously that doesn’t smash either the JGB market or JPY? There are also warnings over private credit - yet we also continue to see circular-investing / vendor-financing mega deals in the AI space.

In geopolitics, the USS Ford has arrived in the Caribbean: what does that mean for Venezuela, as Chile is expected to see a US-friendly shift in its presidential election? In Asia, the US pulled a missile system from Japan as the Beijing–Tokyo row over Taiwan deepens despite the latter’s attempts to deescalate. In Europe, Berlin and Paris may scrap a planned joint fighter as France plans to supply Ukraine with 100 Rafales, upping the ante with Russia; Brussels warns the EU’s proposed €140bn Ukraine loan could have a “knock-on” impact on financial markets; Poland says a rail explosion there was an “unprecedented act of sabotage”; and the FT warns ‘The scramble for Europe is just beginning’, where “as the EU struggles to defend its interests, outside powers play divide and rule,” putting a new spin on ‘DM = EM’. In the Mid-East, the UN Security Council backed Trump’s plan for postwar Gaza, as the US intends to sell F-35 fighter jets to Saudi Arabia, whose more cash-strapped MBS will visit the White House today for arm twisting on expanding the Abraham Accords.

As military spending surges, the fiscal picture is worrying. Russia is raising VAT by 2 percentage points. The US is talking $2,000 cheques for working families paid for by tariffs. France still hasn’t agreed a budget. Germany is about to splurge on arms. Canada is borrowing far more, but not for that. The UK just saw market volatility over suggestions taxes wouldn’t be raised when the market had previously disliked the idea that they would. China is rolling out stimulus. Japan’s PM also wants fiscal stimulus… to lower inflation.

Supply chains are geopolitically squeezed. Both GM and Tesla say they won’t use Chinese parts in the US. German is freezing out Huawei and will bring in new tech controls aimed at China. The Dutch-Chinese Nexperia row rumbles on, and a new row has started. The US still hasn’t formally secured the China rare earths deal it wants. Positively, India says a US trade deal is closer after agreeing to take much more US LNG. Negatively, the US just warned Europe over trade foot-dragging, and the Chair of UBS has talked to Scott Bessent about moving the bank to the States.

Affordability remains a key issue in the West: there’s a Trump summit on it today. The situation is similar in other DM – and worse in EM. House prices are sky high: the average age of a US home buyer has risen to 59(!) A top Aussie banker says housing heat is raising concerns and calls to ‘Put the brakes on’ follow a record A$40bn investor blitz into property as everyone --but the central bank-- predicted would follow RBA rate cuts. Moreover, the AFR warns ‘China’s debt shock is coming. Our high house prices won’t protect us’, and “Australia’s economy isn’t ready.”

The threat of AI job losses is soaring. That’s as MAGA politicians are demanding transparency on AI job losses, where “Protecting US workers collides with need to outpace China”, and ‘Notices of Impending Layoffs by US Companies Surged in October’ (Bloomberg). Yet Elon Musk states his robots could end poverty and provide universal high incomes. So, what’s next: mass unemployment or ‘abundance’ or both? Which central bank has either in their models?

Political populism keeps rising. Mamdani won in New York. Trump has been forced to agree to release the Epstein files, as a far-right (and libertarian) ‘America First’ faction challenges MAGA. In Australia, the Nats/Libs Coalition is down sharply in the polls after it dropped a commitment to net zero and says it wants much lower immigration, as populist One Nation surges. In the UK, the Reform party says it would cut off benefits for EU citizens and slash overseas aid to save £25bn: the UK press says the police are preparing for civil war. On Friday, PM Takaichi announced she may change the corporate code to force Japanese firms to invest more or pay higher wages rather than return profits to shareholders. In Nepal, Indonesia, and Mexico Gen-Z protests just tried to bring down their governments. Again, central banks can’t capture this – but may be captured.

Indeed, D.L. Jacobs argues the Fed’s Miran aims to challenge the foundations of US monetary policy “because the world [Fed] forecasts are trying to measure no longer exists.” Keynesianism emerged in the Great Depression of the 1930s; monetarism with the Great Stagflation of the 1970s; hyper-neoliberalism in the post-Cold War 1990s; central bank QE in the post-GFC 2000s; and Miran argues the Treasury and Fed de facto merged in the 2020s so “The pretence of central bank independence has collapsed. Monetary policy is now politics conducted by other means.” And the US faces a panoply of (geo)political challenges.

“For Miran, the answer is not to restore a lost neutrality. It is to make that power accountable the goal of central bank independence can be achieved only by new means.” We are seeing similar rhetoric from Reform in the UK and the RN in France. (As former Fed Governor Kugler is accused of violating trading ethics, current Governor Cook is in court to fight charges of mortgage fraud, ex-governor Clarida was forced to step down in 2022 over stock trading, and for-now current Governor Bostic was warned over the same.)   

New means means new thinking – and for Miran that’s part of the Mar-a-Lago Accords that also involves trade, the US dollar, and US Treasuries. The current account deficits required to give the world demanded Eurodollars mean US financialisation, polarisation, deindustrialisation, and de-hegemonisation – which the US now intends to resist, not accept.

As such, the boundaries dividing political, monetary, fiscal, trade and other policies are gone (as we had flagged) and, as Jacobs puts it, “Miran argues that coordination should be made deliberate and accountable. He’s on a mission to modernize US-led capitalism, turning ad-hoc crisis management into a coherent framework for political economy.”

But is there one and will it work? We think yes, and it remains to be seen. But that needs to be the market debate, not what payrolls, PMIs, or CPI will be. However, it’s also true that the worse those data are, the greater the pressure for revolutionary policy changes ahead of the key US mid-term elections.

For now avoiding all these debates, the RBA minutes of its November policy rate meeting showed one member pushing back on the idea that its unemployment and inflation goals bear equal weight --so which matters most?-- and the overall message was that the Reserve Bank will only consider cutting rates again if the labor market shows a serious deterioration. That’s the kind of deep Monocene thinking for which one is, or at least was, paid the big bucks. But in the world that exists today, is it possible that such an outcome could also correlate with a further surge in house prices anyway? And if so, then what?

That question doesn’t get asked anywhere near enough in anywhere near enough contexts.

Tyler Durden Tue, 11/18/2025 - 10:20

Factory Orders Data Show Rebound In August

Zero Hedge -

Factory Orders Data Show Rebound In August

As the macro data engine slowly starts to grind back into motion, we are given glimpses of what happened 'months' ago. Earlier we got some jobless claims data from four weeks ago, and now we get Durable Goods and Factory Orders data from August...

...and the data we got was kinda meh...

August Factory orders rose 1.4% MoM (a big swing from the 1.3% MoM decline in July and an even bigger drop in June) but in line with expectations. This bounce lifted Orders by 3.8% YoY...

Source: Bloomberg

Core Factory Orders also rose (just 0.1% MoM), lifting orders 1.53% YoY in August...

Source: Bloomberg

More broadly, durable goods orders (final for August) rose 2.9% MoM (up from -2.8% in July) while Core Durable Goods Orders (ex-transports) rose 0.3% MoM (slightly less than the 0.4% expected) but remained solid for the fifth month in a row...

Source: Bloomberg

Finally, we note that Core shipments, an input for the GDP calculation, declined 0.4% (vs. +0.6% prior).

So, August was solid, but as a reminder, it's November!

Tyler Durden Tue, 11/18/2025 - 10:12

Trump Blasts "Big, Fat, Rich Insurance Companies" As Lawmakers Propose Ways To 'Fix' Obamacare

Zero Hedge -

Trump Blasts "Big, Fat, Rich Insurance Companies" As Lawmakers Propose Ways To 'Fix' Obamacare

Obamacare remains on center stage nearly a week after the government shutdown ended on Nov. 12.

The health coverage program, formally known as the Affordable Care Act Health Insurance Marketplace, was a driver of the government shutdown as Democrats demanded that temporary enhanced subsidies for the program be made permanent.

The shutdown ended only after Senate Republicans agreed to hold a vote on the matter, though they did not guarantee an outcome.

Democrats generally favor making the enhanced subsidies permanent.

Republicans, including President Donald Trump, have proposed alternatives they say will give Americans greater control over their health care spending and lower premiums.

Trump made it extremely clear what his preferred approach is this morning in a FULL CAPS post on Truth Social: (emphasis ours)

THE ONLY HEALTHCARE I WILL SUPPORT OR APPROVE IS SENDING THE MONEY DIRECTLY BACK TO THE PEOPLE, WITH NOTHING GOING TO THE BIG, FAT, RICH INSURANCE COMPANIES, WHO HAVE MADE $TRILLIONS, AND RIPPED OFF AMERICA LONG ENOUGH.

THE PEOPLE WILL BE ALLOWED TO NEGOTIATE AND BUY THEIR OWN, MUCH BETTER, INSURANCE. POWER TO THE PEOPLE!

Congress, do not waste your time and energy on anything else.

This is the only way to have great Healthcare in America!!!

GET IT DONE, NOW.

President DJT

Lawrence Wilson explains below, via The Epoch Times, why Obamacare is a hot issue right now and what both sides are proposing.

Premiums Continue to Rise

Commercial health insurance premiums have risen every year since 2008, according to Health System Tracker, a data collection site run by the nonprofits The Peterson Center on Healthcare and KFF.

Obamacare premiums have also risen nearly every year since the program began in 2014, with the exception of 2020–2023. Those were the first years of the enhanced premium subsidies, authorized by Congress as a temporary response to COVID-19 health emergencies.

The enhanced subsidies allowed people making more than four times the federal poverty level to buy subsidized coverage. They also capped the out-of-pocket premium costs at 8 percent of a person’s household income, with the government paying the rest. The enhanced subsidies are set to expire at the end of 2025.

Rates have risen each year since 2022 and will increase about 26 percent in 2026, on average, for the Benchmark Silver plan.

Direct Payments to Consumers

Trump floated the idea of giving low- and middle-income Americans a direct payment of $2,000 rather than providing a subsidy that is paid to insurance companies.

That would allow people to purchase their own insurance, Trump said in a Nov. 8 social media post. The president added that this would avoid putting more money into a health coverage system that, he said, provided inferior health coverage.

The White House is in discussion with lawmakers about the idea, Trump told reporters on Nov. 14.

“I’ve had personal talks with some Democrats,” he said, adding that the plan would allow consumers to negotiate their own price with an insurer.

Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) is drafting legislation for a similar plan now. His plan would send money directly to individual Health Savings Accounts, much like Trump suggested.

“They can use it to spend on healthcare, so they can buy direct health care, or they can buy insurance, or [use it for] a co-payment or deductible,” Scott told Reporters on Nov. 10.

Consumers could use the funds to buy any plan authorized by their state’s insurance commission, he added.

Scott and some other Republicans believe the enhanced subsidies drive up the cost of health insurance for everyone while masking the increase to consumers.

Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) speaks during a hearing with Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Capitol Hill in Washington on Sept. 4, 2025. Madalina Kilroy/The Epoch Times

“Insurers get paid no matter what—and taxpayers get stuck with the tab,” Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) said in a Nov. 7 speech.

Increasing federal payments in the hope of decreasing costs is “like putting a band-aid on a broken bone,” Cassidy said.

“Instead of paying insurance companies to manage our money, let’s trust Americans to manage their own care—with a pre-funded Federal Flexible Spending Account,” he said.

A Flexible Spending Account is similar to a Health Savings Account but is not owned by the individual and does not roll over from year to year.

Addressing Fraud and Abuse

Republicans generally have been reluctant to extend the enhanced subsidies without also addressing abuse of the Obamacare system, which they say rose dramatically after those subsidies were introduced.

The expiration date indicates that the subsidies were not considered a long-term solution, Dr. Mehmet Oz, administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said in a Fox News interview on Nov. 16.

“It creates incentives for fraud,” he said.

Data indicates that 4.4 million people are enrolled in Obamacare, apparently without their knowledge, Dr. Oz said. He noted that, unlike 80 percent of health insurance holders, this population has never used their coverage for a doctor visit, prescription, or any other medical service.

“There are discussions around extending the subsidies, if we deal with the fraud, waste, and abuse,” Dr. Oz said.

Administrator for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Mehmet Oz speaks during an event in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on Oct. 16, 2025. Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Temporary Extension

A bipartisan group of House members has introduced a bill to extend certain tax credits for Obamacare enrollees, which are set to expire at the end of the year.

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Jen Kiggans (R-Va.) and Tom Suozzi (D-N.Y.), would extend the “enhanced” premium tax credits for one year, avoiding an abrupt end to a financial benefit many Americans have come to rely on.

“While the enhanced premium tax credit created during the pandemic was meant to be temporary, we should not let it expire without a plan in place. My legislation will protect hardworking Virginians from facing health insurance bills they can’t afford, thus losing much-needed access to care,” Kiggans said in a statement.

Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), a retiring lawmaker who helped negotiate the end of the shutdown, voiced optimism that a bipartisan solution is possible.

“I think there are a number of them who are very serious [about working to lower health coverage costs],” Shaheen told reporters on Nov. 10. She added that any solution would have to address the expiring subsidies.

Separately, a group of 32 bipartisan House members wrote to Senate leaders asking that they be included in any discussions on the upcoming health care reform vote.

“If we work together, our hope is that the bill will not only achieve a sixty-vote majority in the Senate, but will also then move to the House for immediate consideration and passage,” the group wrote, led by Kiggans and Josh Gottheimer (D-N.J.).

Adding Income Cap

Reps. Sam Liccardo (D-Calif.) and Kevin Kiley (R-Calif.) have introduced legislation to control the cost of extending the enhanced subsidies by imposing an income cap on recipients.

Currently, anyone earning over four times the federal poverty level can qualify for the subsidy. This proposal would cap enrollment at six times the poverty level, or $192,900 for a family of four.

“This will provide short-term relief while we tackle broader reforms to lower the cost of care,” Kiley said in a Nov. 10 statement.

The plan would save approximately $5 billion over two years, the congressmen estimated.

The Senate is expected to vote on changes to Obamacare by mid-December.

That gives the 20 states and the District of Columbia that operate their own Obamacare marketplaces, plus the federal marketplace, about two weeks to make adjustments to their subsidy offers before 2026 coverage begins. Annual enrollment for Obamacare has been open since Nov. 1.

Any solution approved by the Senate must then pass the House and be signed by the president to become law.

Tyler Durden Tue, 11/18/2025 - 10:05

NAHB: Builder Confidence Increased Slightly in November, Negative territory for 19 consecutive months

Calculated Risk -

The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) reported the housing market index (HMI) was at 38, up from 37 last month. Any number below 50 indicates that more builders view sales conditions as poor than good.

From the NAHB: Builder Sentiment Relatively Flat in November as Market Headwinds Persist
Market uncertainty exacerbated by the government shutdown along with economic uncertainty stemming from tariffs and rising construction costs kept builder confidence firmly in negative territory in November.

Builder confidence in the market for newly built single-family homes rose one point to 38 in November, according to the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI) released today.

“While lower mortgage rates are a positive development for affordability conditions, many buyers remain hesitant because of the recent record-long government shutdown and concerns over job security and inflation,” said NAHB Chairman Buddy Hughes, a home builder and developer from Lexington, N.C. “More builders are using incentives to get deals closed, including lowering prices, but many potential buyers still remain on the fence.”

We continue to see demand-side weakness as a softening labor market and stretched consumer finances are contributing to a difficult sales environment,” said NAHB Chief Economist Robert Dietz. “After a decline for single-family housing starts in 2025, NAHB is forecasting a slight gain in 2026 as builders continue to report future sales conditions in marginally positive territory.”

In a further sign of ongoing challenges for the housing market, the latest HMI survey also revealed that 41% of builders reported cutting prices in November, a record high in the post-Covid period and the first time this measure has passed 40%. Meanwhile, the average price reduction was 6% in November, the same rate as the previous month. The use of sales incentives was 65% in November, tying the share in September and October.
...
The HMI index gauging current sales conditions increased two points to 41, the index measuring future sales fell three points to 51 and the gauge charting traffic of prospective buyers posted a one-point gain to 26.

Looking at the three-month moving averages for regional HMI scores, the Northeast rose two points to 48, the Midwest fell one point to 41, the South increased three points to 34 and the West gained two points to 30.
emphasis added
NAHB HMI Click on graph for larger image.

This graph shows the NAHB index since Jan 1985.

The index has been below 50 for nineteen consecutive months.

Elliott Mgmnt Builds 'Large' Stake In Barrick Mining As Central Bank Gold Buying Accelerates

Zero Hedge -

Elliott Mgmnt Builds 'Large' Stake In Barrick Mining As Central Bank Gold Buying Accelerates

Elliott Management has built a large stake in Barrick Mining Corp., the Financial Times reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

Elliott’s stake - valued at at least $700 million - puts it among Barrick’s 10 biggest investors, the FT cited the people as saying, and comes after the Canadian gold giant struggled to benefit from the metal’s rally.

Bloomberg reports that Barrick Interim CEO Mark Hill recently said he’s “shifting the focus” to assets in North America, where the company owns a bundle of lucrative gold mines that have considerable potential to expand. Previously, projects in Asia and Africa were at the core of the growth strategy.

Barrick Mining is trading around 4% higher in the pre-market, at its highest since 2012...

...notably outperforming gold in the last few weeks...

Elliott's reported 'buy the dip' of Barrick comes as Goldman Sachs precious metals team notes that central banks are also accelerating their buying of the barbarous relic.

The timing, size and speed of last Monday’s price increase are consistent with Asian central bank buying, which often appears in London prices around Asian trading hours and thus sees an initial decrease in the Shanghai-London price premium but is then often followed by delayed momentum buying in retail China and then the West.

We continue to see elevated central bank gold accumulation as a multi-year trend as central banks diversify their reserves to hedge geopolitical and financial risks.

Goldman's nowcast of central bank and institutional gold demand on the London OTC estimates September purchases at 64 tonnes (67 tonnes on a 12-month moving-average basis), up from 21 tonnes in August and consistent with the typical post-summer seasonal acceleration...

Estimated purchases were led by the Middle East - Qatar at 20 tonnes and Oman at 7 tonnes — and China at 15 tonnes...

The pickup in central bank buying, together with the largest monthly gold Western ETF inflow (112 tonnes) since mid-2022, marks the first time in this cycle that strong post-2022 central bank demand and such a sizable increase in ETF holdings have occurred simultaneously.

This combination alongside likely additional off-ETF physical buying by ultra-high net worth individuals (based on client conversations), likely contributed to September’s 10% rally - the strongest monthly increase in gold prices since 2016.

Finally, Goldman still expects continued central bank buying, alongside private investor flows under Fed easing, to lift gold prices to $4,900 by end-2026, with significant upside if the private investor diversification theme were to gain more traction.

Professional subscribers can read Goldman's full Precious Metals team note at our new Marketdesk.ai portal

Tyler Durden Tue, 11/18/2025 - 09:45

Super Creepy 'The World Ahead 2026' Economist Magazine Cover Signals War, Pestilence, & Financial Collapse Next Year

Zero Hedge -

Super Creepy 'The World Ahead 2026' Economist Magazine Cover Signals War, Pestilence, & Financial Collapse Next Year

Authored by Michael Snyder via The End of The American Dream blog,

There is one magazine that represents the interests of the global elite more than any other.  It is known as “The Economist”, and each year it puts out an issue that is dedicated to what is coming in the year ahead.  As we have seen so many times before, these issues tend to be alarmingly accurate.  The reason why they are so accurate is because the ultra-wealthy elite have an enormous amount of influence over the course of human events.  If they are absolutely determined to make something happen, there is a good chance that it is going to happen.  Ominously, it appears that they are anticipating a great deal of global chaos in 2026.

The Economist has been around since 1843, but it has never had a very large readership among the general population.

Ultimately, it is a publication by the elite and for the elite.

According to Wikipedia, it has editorial offices all over the planet but it is primarily based in the city of London…

The Economist is a British news and current affairs journal published in a weekly print magazine format and daily on digital platforms. Variously referred to as a magazine and a newspaper,[6][7] it publishes stories on topics that include economics, business, geopolitics, technology and culture. Mostly written and edited in London,[8] it has other editorial offices in the United States and in major cities in continental Europe, Asia, and the Middle East.[9][8] The publication prominently features data journalism, and has a focus on interpretive analysis over original reporting, to both criticism and acclaim.

Many of the wealthiest families in Europe are among the shareholders of the company, and Sir Evelyn Robert de Rothschild was actually the chairman from the early 1970s to the late 1980s

Aside from the Agnelli family, smaller shareholders in the company include CadburyRothschild (21%), SchroderLayton and other family interests as well as a number of staff and former staff shareholders.[37][43] A board of trustees formally appoints the editor, who cannot be removed without its permission. The Economist Newspaper Limited is a wholly owned subsidiary of The Economist Group. Sir Evelyn Robert de Rothschild was chairman of the company from 1972 to 1989.

If you want to know what the global elite are thinking, this is the publication that you need to be reading.

And the cover for “The World Ahead 2026” issue is perhaps the most ominous that they have ever published…

When you look at that cover, what stands out to you?

To me, the fact that there are so many symbols relating to war really got my attention.

There is a huge red tank on one side of the cover, and another huge red tank on the other side of the cover.

At the top there are several large missiles that look like they are ready to be launched, and at the bottom there are more large missiles.

Also, right in the middle we see two enormous swords that are crossed.

That is clearly meant to symbolize war.

Obviously they believe that war will continue to be a major theme in 2026, and that is something that I have been consistently warning about.

And they also seem to think that certain individuals will continue to be major players in world affairs during the coming year.

Volodymyr Zelensky is clearly visible in the upper right hand portion of the cover.

Xi Jinping, Vladimir Putin and Benjamin Netanyahu appear to be depicted on the left hand portion of the cover.

And just like last year, Donald Trump is right in the middle.

On Monday, Trump refused to rule out the possibility of sending U.S. ground troops into Venezuela

Asked if he would rule out US troops on the ground in Venezuela, Trump replied: “No I don’t rule out that, I don’t rule out anything.

“We just have to take care of Venezuela,” he added. “They dumped hundreds of thousands of people into our country from prisons.”

Personally, I think that this is a trap.

If we go to war with Venezuela, a large portion of our military forces will be tied up and our relations with the rest of the world will greatly suffer.

And Trump is also suggesting that military strikes in Mexico and Colombia could be coming

President Trump hinted at being open to sending military strikes to Mexico and Colombia in order to stop drugs on Monday, sending chills across the region.

The president made the comments during a press conference on Monday as he hosted a meeting with FIFA President Gianni Infantino and the White House task force on the 2026 World Cup at the Oval Office.

“Would I launch strikes on Mexico to stop drugs? It’s OK with me. Whatever we have to do to stop drugs. Mexico is…look I looked at Mexico City over the weekend. There’s some big problems over there. If we had to would we do there what we’ve done to the waterways? You know there is almost no drugs coming through our waterways anymore. Isn’t it down like 85%?” the president said.

On the other side of the globe, I expect the conflict between Israel and Iran to erupt again, I expect the war in Ukraine to continue to escalate, and I will be watching China very, very closely.

Getting back to the magazine cover, I also noticed that there is a chart that seems to depict some sort of a financial crash right under the crossed swords.

And not too far below that chart, there is a red image of a broken dollar sign.

In addition, throughout the bottom half of the graphic it looks like paper currency is falling everywhere.

Wow.

Obviously they are trying to communicate something about the global economy, and it certainly isn’t good.

Will 2026 be a year of financial collapse?

We won’t have to wait too long to find out.

I also noticed two gigantic syringes near the bottom of the cover.

And throughout the cover there are lots of “pills” floating around.

I started to count them, but there are just too many.

So what does this mean?

Are they suggesting that another global pandemic is on the way?

Will 2026 be a year when people are taking shots and pills to try to protect themselves from a major pestilence that has broken out?

Interestingly, an outbreak of the Marburg virus has just been confirmed in Ethiopia

Ethiopia has confirmed an outbreak of the deadly Marburg virus in the south of the country, the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) said on Saturday.

The Marburg virus is one of the deadliest known pathogens. Like Ebola, it causes severe bleeding, fever, vomiting and diarrhea and has a 21-day incubation period.

Also like Ebola, it is transmitted via contact with bodily fluids and has a fatality rate of between 25 and 80 per cent.

The head of the World Health Organization, Ethiopia’s Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, confirmed on Friday that at least nine cases had been detected in southern Ethiopia, two days after Africa CDC was alerted to a suspected haemorrhagic virus in the region.

Personally, I am convinced that pestilence will be a major theme in 2026.

I hope that all of you have been getting ready for that.

Lastly, I wanted to mention the giant raised fist near the top of the cover.

A raised fist has been the primary symbol of resistance to the Trump administration.

And I don’t think that it is an accident that the giant raised fist has been placed right on top of the American flag in this graphic.

Are the global elite planning civil unrest in major U.S. cities in 2026?

We know that they have been lavishly funding far left protest groups in this country.

Will 2026 be a year when mass protests against Trump go to the next level?

I think that is their plan.

I think that they fully intend to unleash chaos, and that fits perfectly with what I am expecting too.

Unfortunately for the elite, I do not believe that they will be able to control the chaos that is coming.

We really are right on the brink of a global nightmare, and once it starts nobody is going to be able to wake up from it.

Michael’s new book entitled “10 Prophetic Events That Are Coming Next” is available in paperback and for the Kindle on Amazon.com, and you can subscribe to his Substack newsletter at michaeltsnyder.substack.com.

Tyler Durden Tue, 11/18/2025 - 09:30

Valar Atomics Achieves Cold Criticality With Project NOVA

Zero Hedge -

Valar Atomics Achieves Cold Criticality With Project NOVA

California-based reactor developer Valar Atomics announced the milestone achievement of obtaining criticality under Project NOVA in collaboration with the Department of Energy's (DOE) Los Alamos National Lab (LANL). Criticality was achieved at 11:45 AM PT on November 17th.

Zero-power criticality, or “cold criticality”, is the foundational milestone which precedes nuclear operation with power. It is a self-sustaining chain reaction of uranium-235 within a nuclear core, but without reaching full operating temperatures or actively removing heat with a working fluid. Zero-power criticality allows a greater understanding of the neutronic characteristics of the core and a verification of assumptions about fuel, moderators, active reactivity control, and burnable poisons.

Valar Atomics is a relatively new nuclear startup that has secured $130 million in funding, with participation from Anduril founder Palmer Luckey and Palantir CTO Shyam Sankar, among other investors. Valar's business model involves mass-producing small modular reactors and clustering them at large sites, or "gigasites," to power data centers and industrial processes independently of the traditional electricity grid. Unlike many of its peers, Valar is developing advanced nuclear reactors that use a high-temperature gas reactor (HTGR) design with TRISO fuel and helium as a coolant.

Valar's Project NOVA (Nuclear Observations of Valar Atomics) is currently being conducted at LANL’s National Criticality Experiments Research Center (NCERC) in Nevada. The criticality test began five days earlier on November 12th, as the approach to initial criticality is a slow and controlled process. The reactor being tested is a “zero-power” design, meaning it's not intended to output thermal energy for conversion to electricity. The primary purpose is to obtain physics data to confirm design characteristics of the Ward250, their reactor included in the DOE’s Reactor Pilot Project.

Adam Stein, the Director for Nuclear Energy Innovation at The Breakthrough Institute, commented “achieving cold criticality represents a milestone for Reactor Pilot Program participants and meets the goal outlined in the recent executive order. This is one step of many toward a functional commercial product”.

NCERC has been used for decades to perform reactor and nuclear weapon physics testing. The recent core physics testing with the Deimos experiment laid the foundation for the NOVA testing. Deimos was the first test in decades using TRISO fuels pellets with HALEU fuel. The benchmarks developed from the Deimos test, along with some of the core’s outer structure, enabled Valar to rapidly achieve this criticality-focused project.

“Valar Atomics provided the reactor core, TRISO fuel, and system configuration.

LANL/ NCERC provided the critical assembly, facility safety envelope, experimentalists, test instrumentation, experiment platform and reflectors, data analysis, and validation oversight”

Valar’s announcement hasn't discussed the licensing or regulatory pathways that were utilized to enable the criticality testing, but it can be assumed the company coordinated the required permissions and certifications through the DOE, not the NRC. They also likely leveraged the previous data from the Deimos experiment and the lower risk nature of a zero-power reactor to obtain authorization faster.

The other leading reactor developer of micro-HTGRs, Radiant Nuclear, submitted its DOE Authorization Request for Kaleidos (DARK) to the DOE for review. Approval is anticipated by the end of the year. Radiant is pursuing reactor testing at the Demonstration of Microreactor Experiments (DOME) at Idaho National Laboratory (INL).

To provide the comparison between the Project NOVA test and the DOME test — Valar is performing the precursor testing that would be done prior to a test like the one Radiant is about to do at INL. Similar to the testing Valar’s Ward250 reactor will perform in Utah, Radiant will be performing testing for their Kaleidos reactor design add a higher power level than what Project NOVA is achieving, for which the collected data will be used for the eventual NRC licensing of their commercial designs.

In May, President Trump announced the goal of three reactors obtaining criticality prior to July 4th, 2026. The DOE is pursuing this goal by providing 11 reactor projects expedited licensing pathways to take their reactors from powerpoint to actual operations. Valar’s designated reactor, the Ward250, is a High Temperature Gas-Cooled Reactor (HTGR) designed for 100kW. They recently broke ground at their construction site in Utah and claim to be on track to meet the President’s target.

Valar's Ward 250 High Temperature Gas-Cooled Reactor

The initial criticality achievement is the first of six total configurations that will be tested for physics data collecting, enabling the eventual testing of the Ward250, as well as future research at the NCERC.

Tyler Durden Tue, 11/18/2025 - 09:10

ADP Employment Report Signals Rebound In Labor Market; Claims Confirm Resilience

Zero Hedge -

ADP Employment Report Signals Rebound In Labor Market; Claims Confirm Resilience

For the four weeks ending Oct. 31, 2025, private employers shed an average of 2,500 jobs a week, according to ADP's new weekly employment report update, suggesting that the labor market improved significantly in the last week (from an 11,250 average drop during the prior week).

Extrapolating with some simple math that implies a monthly drop of 10,000 jobs...

While job growth is admittedly sluggish, ADP reports that new hires are on the upswing:

In October, new hires accounted for 4.4 percent of all employees, ADP payroll data shows, up from 3.9 percent a year ago.

This growing share of new hires would seem to run counter to the slowed pace of hiring. That contradiction tells us a lot about today’s jobs market.  

New hires typically fluctuates with the business cycle, but the aging U.S. workforce means that demographics have begun playing a bigger role in hiring decisions.

Employers are hiring to replace existing workers, not increase headcount.

ADP continues to note that employers are taking on a bigger share of new hires, even amid a slowdown in job creation.

This suggests that more workers are heading for the exits.  

Demographic data also suggests that the drop in new hires isn’t due to normal business cycle dynamics. Thirty-six percent of U.S. workers are 55 or older. In 2015, less than 25 percent U.S. workers were that old. 

This change has put employers on new footing. Increasingly, hiring is no longer driven primarily by customer demand and economic fluctuations, but by a need to replace a growing number of departing workers.

Additionally, after more than six weeks of government shutdown, official macro data is starting to flow... but it's lagged.

The number of Americans applying for jobless benefits for the first time totaled 232,000 in the week ended Oct. 18, according to the Labor Department website. This print certainly shows no sign of the potential weakness that many have anticipated (but then again it's a month old).

Source: Bloomberg

However, unadjusted state-level claims data was released, and that confirmed a pick up in initial jobless benefit demands... especially in the 'Deep TriState'...

Source: Bloomberg

Continuing jobless claims picked up, but remains below mid-summer highs...

Source: Bloomberg

So, now we know that a month ago, claims data showed a still resilient labor market.. but we also know - based on private data suppliers - that job cut announcements have accelerated notably...

Source: Bloomberg

So, choose your own adventure with this data. We suspect there will be a lot more of this in the next few days as more and more (delayed) data is released.

Tyler Durden Tue, 11/18/2025 - 08:40

Transcript: Binky Chadha, Chief US Equity & Global Strategist at Deutsche Bank Securities

The Big Picture -

 

 

The transcript from this week’s MiB, Binky Chadha, Chief US Equity & Global Strategist at Deutsche Bank Securities, is below.

You can stream and download our full conversation, including any podcast extras, on Apple Podcasts, SpotifyYouTube, and Bloomberg. All of our earlier podcasts on your favorite pod hosts can be found here.

~~~

This is a Master’s in Business with Barry Ritholtz on Bloomberg Radio.

Barry Ritholtz: I’m Barry Ritholtz on the latest Masters in Business podcast. Another banger. I have Binky Chadda. He’s Chief US strategist for Deutsche Bank Securities. Fascinating career and approach to looking at markets. He’s an economist, but essentially operates as a market strategist. He’s been fairly constructive where he is supposed to be started the year 2025 with the 7,000 target on the s and p 500. Brings in a lot of different factors that makes his work so interesting at Deutsche Bank Securities. Not just economics, but FX equities, global perspective focused on US equities. I thought this conversation was absolutely fascinating, and I think you will also, with no further ado, my interview of Deutsche Bank Securities. Binky Chadha.

Binky Chadha. Welcome to Bloomberg.

Binky Chadha: Thank you.

Barry Ritholtz: So I have been looking forward to this conversation for a long time, primarily because so many people, when I ask them who their mentors are, reference you. So you have a lot of influence throughout the street.

Binky Chadha: That’s very kind.

Barry Ritholtz: We’ll, we’ll come back to that a little later. Let, let’s start with your career. You get a bachelor’s in mathematics and computer science from Denison and then a PhD in philosophy focused on economics from Columbia, is that right?

Binky Chadha: A PhD in economics from Columbia.

Barry Ritholtz: So what was the career plan?

Binky Chadha:  The career plan was, you know, to get a PhD in economics and study development economics and alleviate poverty and help the world. I went to graduate school and graduate school, you know, circumstances kind of rings that outta you.

Barry Ritholtz: And here’s a whole lot of debt. Go, go into, go do some well, somewhere.

Binky Chadha: Well, I mean, I think that development economics is sort of builds on, is not necessarily core. You know, core is micro and macro. And I ended up basically studying macro and then went to basically work at the International Monetary Fund in Washington DC

Barry Ritholtz: First, first job right outta school. You were there for a while. 17 years

Binky Chadha:  17 years, yeah.

Barry Ritholtz: So what were the various positions you had? I, I saw a division chief of the Euro area and global markets.

Binky Chadha:  I’ll do it in chronological order. Sure. So I started basically in the, so the IMF has a grad program, just like any investment bank. It’s called the Economist Program. And my second assignment was in research, and I stayed in research for the next few years. It was the heyday of the IMFs to research department under Jacob Frankl and then Michael Musa. And we had all the world’s leading researchers visiting the IMF. And then the Iron Curtain came down and the, I MFS suddenly had 30 new member countries and we all got pulled into working on various aspects of that. So I worked on Bulgaria pretty much full-time for, for a year.

Barry Ritholtz: So you were at IMF for almost two decades. How did that experience shape your view about the economy and markets both domestically and internationally? Yeah,

Binky Chadha:  I, so I, you know, I started in the research department, but I went from there to the Asian department and, and even while in the research department, like my participation in Bulgaria, we always, oh, at least I always, you know, a a was eager to participate in the IMFs bread and butter work, which is really country work. So I remember going to Singapore in my very early days. Singapore is, you know, a a obviously a small country, but because it’s a small country has issues, especially from a development strategy point of view that are sort of key. You remember in the 1970s we used to talk about the Knicks. You know, so, I mean, I could talk for quite a while about Singapore, but Singapore started, i I, in the early 1970s with a 10, 12% unemployment rate, had low wage export led growth model. By 1979, unemployment was 2%. Wow. Both had been strong. And because of the peculiarities and the politics of Singapore, it’s ethnic Chinese that moved out of Malaysia to have an independent country. When you want to grow rapidly, but you only have 2% unemployment, you would end up sort of violating the principle of what you were formed because you would need basically lots of imported labor from Malaysia and Indonesia. And

Barry Ritholtz: A wild success story, though Singapore’s economy has done really well, hasn’t it? So,

Binky Chadha:  So, so it, it, it it has because they made a very concerted push at the time to move basically towards higher value added activities. And the first paper I ever wrote on a country was really Singapore, and it’s about Singapore’s high wage policy. They announced an increase in real labor costs or wages. It’s also sort of the retirement plan of six 0% in 1979. Two work through the system over the next three years. And, and it was wildly successful in basically, you know, turning the economy into sort of a much higher value added growth part. I mean, the finance was some of it, but it was, you know, it it, the focus was more on sort of high tech manufacturing too.

Barry Ritholtz: So, so today you’re overseeing asset allocation primarily for US based investors for Deutsche Bank. I know you’re global also.

Binky Chadha:  Yes, that is true. My focus, and partly because I’m here and partly because the US is the, the biggest, most important and biggest driver. I’ve been our equity strategist in two different stints over periods. So I, I actually spent most of my time basically on US equities, I would say.

Barry Ritholtz: So how do the lessons from Singapore and Bulgaria or just global perspectives via the IMF, how does that translate into making better asset allocation decisions for US investors?

Binky Chadha: I think those experiences are basically, you know, things that sort of inform you about the bigger picture and forces that are ongoing that, you know, one may not sort of see day to day, certainly not day to day, but week to week, but sort of, you know, explains the direction in, in which things are going. And, and I think Singapore is sort of a good example for, I mean, we started talking about development economics, which was, but but, but it’s about growth economics and development economics and sort of like, you know, does policy really have a rule a role, or should we just let the free markets keep going? Hmm.

Barry Ritholtz: Really, really interesting. So after 17 years at the IMF, what led you to Deutsche Bank in oh four?

Binky Chadha: So the IMF does not historically never really spoke about exchange rates because it’s a market sensitive variable. That was the thinking at the time. But that didn’t mean that the IMF didn’t spend a lot of energy working on fx. We had an internal group that, you know, some people in the market knew, and basically because we used to have a dialogue with the markets, I I, there was an opening basically in FX because a, a a, the FX strategist who had been around for quite a while, he, he, he, he had moved on or retired basically. And, and so they asked me, ’cause they, he dets bank at the time. So the, the strategist that I’m referring to, his name is Mike Rosenberg. He really did FX for me top down macro point of view. And, and it is hard to find people like that. But I was at the IMFI was trained as an economist and I had done plenty of work on fx. So,

Barry Ritholtz: So given given all your background in economics, currency development, how do you end up eventually as an equity strategist for Deutche Bank? Because that seems like Sure. It’s, it’s adjacent to economic and economists. Yeah,

Binky Chadha: So, so for a few years, I, I I, last few years at the IMFI was actually part of a small group that was responsible for developing and maintaining basically a dialogue with the markets. I used to report to Stanley Fisher who said he was, oh, okay. He was tired of reading in the newspaper on the way to work that another country had gone under and somebody should be having a dialogue. And the

Barry Ritholtz: Market at the time, it was fisher,

Binky Chadha: It was Stanley Fisher. He was the first deputy managing director of the IMF in the late nineties, which is, so this is soon after the a Asian financial crisis, a a and then sort of, you could argue that the Dominoes continued for the next few years.

Barry Ritholtz:  When, when you reported to Stanley Fisher, was he at IMF or he had, or had he gone elsewhere? He,

Binky Chadha: He was at the IMF. He was the first deputy managing director, which would be the counterpart of being the CEO as opposed to being the president of the imm. Got it. So he ran the IMF intellectually and otherwise, and it, it, it was a small group of us that, you know, basically was a financial markets a dialogue with an open license to go out there and tell us about any and everything that you think that matters. You know,

Barry Ritholtz: So, so how do you transition from head of Foreign Exchange research to us Chief US Equity strategist?

Binky Chadha: Yeah, so what I, what I was gonna say on that was simply that a, you know, I came to do FX strategy and research, but I really wanted to do things more sort of close to the markets. And there was a simple practical issue, which is if you wanna be near the markets Yeah. The center of liquidity was really 7:00 AM to 8:00 AM London time. And, and, and so you either live in London or, you know, you find a US asset class. So I found US equity, so Gotcha. Purely

00:10:53 [Speaker Changed] As opposed, opposed to covering FX in London. You did equity in the states

00:10:56 [Speaker Changed] Yeah. In the middle of the night.

00:10:59 [Speaker Changed] So, so since we’re talking about both equity and foreign exchange, you’ve said we have favorable investor positioning, a stable dollar investor, animal spirits and robust buyback activity, lots of m and a activity going on, and high business confidence. That sounds like a fairly bullish set of factors.

00:11:28 [Speaker Changed] It, it, it is a very bullish set of factors. What I would point out is that, you know, equities historically are really about the business cycle, and that’s why people wrote pieces that are well known on Wall Street there from some time ago that, you know, getting at what drives the cycle. And once upon a time, the US business cycle was just really the housing cycle. There’s a very famous paper with that title I, I and, and, and, and you know, if you fast forward from there, basically to, to today we have a very, very, very peculiar cycle is the way I would put it. We’ve had for the last two, almost three years now, essentially full employment in the labor market. And what is at odds with the traditional cycle is that when unemployment is low, you are typically at the end of the cycle and growth tends to be low.

00:12:24 But for the last two to three years, what we’ve had is 4% approximately unemployment. But GDP growth, especially underlying GDP growth rank pretty steady at 3% showing some signs of going even higher basically. And what I would say is historically that is very, very rare. It’s happened only 6% of the time if you do it things on a quarterly basis, 6% of the time since World War ii. Wow. So, and, and, and it’s no secret when those two times were one was in the 1960s where I would argue basically that’s really the takeoff, that that’s really the post world war recovery with a big lag because people didn’t know in the fifties what exactly to, because you could only extrapolate the great, you know, the, the Great Depression and World War ii. So it took a while I, but the sixties is really the post World War II recovery. And the second time that happened is more recently and, and in, and, and everybody is reminded of that now is the second half of the 1990s. But it goes without saying that both of those periods, like the current period have been very good basically for equity markets. If, when unemployment, when, so when you have a job, but growth is strong risk, appetite is going to be high. I think that’s not, you know, surprising. And, and, and that’s kind of almost exactly where we are.

00:13:53 [Speaker Changed] So you mentioned the sixties, you mentioned the nineties. I have to ask you about the 2020s, which on the one hand, and we’ll circle back to housing. I’m, I’m fascinated by that, but this feels like a little bit of a, to use your word, peculiar cycle because during the pandemic we had the biggest a after 15 years of more or less of monetary driven stimulus, we had the single biggest fiscal stimulus, at least as a percentage of gdp. DP Sure. Since World War ii, are we seeing that boom, that boom let, I don’t know what to call it, on a bit of a lag? Or has it hit the economy and is beginning to fade a,

00:14:35 [Speaker Changed] A a a from what I look at my reading would be that this has been going on for a while. It’s been going on basically through a variety of policies and, and, and, and so I don’t think it’s really coming from the policies. I might even go far enough to say that it’s happening despite the policies because we had a massive hiccup this year. I I and, and it has to do, so, you know, one of the things about a cycle and how vulnerable or strong it is has to do with basically, you know, household and corporate balance sheets. Right. And a a so in, in, in, in sort of a, a, a peculiar way, we are blessed in my view, because of the global financial crisis, which created huge de-leveraging. Right. On the, on the household side, we, and then we had COVID and you needed to have your balance sheets, right? If you were a a, a company and you needed to basically get used to dealing with new shocks. And arguably we got another one today. So, but what I would argue this resilience is partly a blessing of the two large shocks that we already had. And,

00:15:54 [Speaker Changed] And long before COVID, most of corporate America had refinanced all their long-term debt very favorably. So heading into this, both households and companies pretty well situated

00:16:05 [Speaker Changed] E exactly. That that EII would agree completely. And, and they remain. So I would say right now, outside of a few pockets, you don’t really see any signs of excess. So there’s every reason to believe that it continues. And if you start, you know, by looking just at like, sort of near term economic forecast as one idea, basically everybody has a pickup in growth next year. So

00:16:35 [Speaker Changed] Based on either fed cuts or, we’ll, we’ll talk about policy issues coming up, up later. Sure. What I wanted to ask you about, you mentioned housing is such a key factor in cycles. Is it a leading factor or is it a benefit of a positive business cycle? Because a lot of people kind of grew up in the two thousands, which felt very backwards. Backward. Sure. Right. The first time we had ultra low rates and a few generations. And so all the refinance and heloc, home equity loan withdrawals, all that stuff felt like it was, the real estate was driving the economy as opposed to the economy benefiting real estate. Right.

00:17:18 [Speaker Changed] So what I would point out is that the housing market today is a much smaller part of the US economy than it used to be. So if you go back to the seventies, you know, we are talking six, seven, 8% of GDP is housing. Wow. Today it’s like more like 2%. I apologize that, I don’t know the exact decimal point, but it’s

00:17:37 [Speaker Changed] A fraction of what

00:17:38 [Speaker Changed] It was. It’s a, it’s a, it’s, it’s a fraction of what it was. And, and so it’s, I I mean, and we were just talking about 3% GDP growth for the last two, two and a half years. And housing’s been in the doldrums for quite a while. I

00:17:53 [Speaker Changed] Would say we, we’ve been under building single family homes since the financial crisis. Yeah. So it’s not a big contributor there. What are we doing? 7 50, 800. But,

00:18:01 [Speaker Changed] But what is very peculiar about this cycle is that, you know, so there’s is a very important fact when you think about the 3% or 3% plus GDP growth numbers, which is, you know, that it actually, and, and, and equities are about cyclicality and cyclical variation. So recessions are big events and recoveries are big events. But what I think is, is, is easily missed is that two thirds of the US economy is actually stable growth economy. It’s like the old days of consumer staples earnings where every company analyst in the room would get mad when I would say, you don’t need an analyst to tell you, you just need a ruler as to what their earnings are gonna be. ’cause I was so predictable. And in the same vein, two thirds of us, GDP is really stable growth. GDP, now it’s not rip roaring growth, but it’s two, you know, 2% growth.

00:18:56 What I I I, the cycle comes from the cyclical parts basically. And that’s a little bit over 20% of GDP. So it’s not really that huge in, but all the cyclicality really comes from there. And when it gets going, it’s very powerful. And, and if you think about what is the cyclical parts, I can go further, basically it would be number one is consumer durables, it, it, number two is corporate CapEx, number three is housing, and number four is structures. And so what is extremely unusual about this recovery from my point of view is that stable growth’s doing what it’s always doing, it is mostly services. It, it, it’s really that, you know, if you look at the cyclical part of us, GDP, yes it’s growing, but it’s at the bottom of the channel basically. So it actually has a lot of room to move up, up to the upside, like 10, 15%. I’m saying,

00:19:53 [Speaker Changed] Does that include all of the tech investments and AI and data centers that seem to be just full on booming?

00:20:01 [Speaker Changed] Yeah. So, so the tech investment wouldn’t be in here. I mean, if you look at CapEx, if you take out soft, the AI party, it’s, it’s on the soft side. But, so you can take, as I always say, you can take, you know, a bearish view on that, which is it’s all coming from this one part, or you can take a bullish part that the other part’s going to start to happen. So, and here what I would get say is that it’s hard to put your finger on exactly what the issue is, but there’s a lot of overlaps in the different aspects of what’s going on. So I just gave you the list of the four parts that are not doing great. I, I, I, I, I, I, I

00:20:44 [Speaker Changed] All of which seems to be somewhat interest rate sensitive, and I know you’re looking for a few more cuts over the next year or so. Sure. Could is that what’s gonna light the next leg start the next leg moving higher? I

00:20:58 [Speaker Changed] Mean, I think interest rates are important for housing

00:21:00 [Speaker Changed] And durables, right? You buy a house, you fill it with furniture and appliances and a car.

00:21:06 [Speaker Changed] Sure. I I, but what I would say is I don’t think that interest rates are absolutely the key because CapEx, we were just talking about that a little bit earlier about corporate balance sheets. I I since the 1970s, what corporate America learned is that you don’t spend beyond your means. I would say most CapEx, especially for s and p 500 companies is coming from internally generated cash flow, right? And, and if you look basically at the three uses of cash flow, you know, dividends, CapEx, and buybacks and, and, and you take their total spending relative to their total cash flow, it’s been this side of a hundred percent forever.

00:21:48 [Speaker Changed] Which sounds, sounds pretty reasonable,

00:21:49 [Speaker Changed] Right? EEEE. Exactly. And so I don’t think that the interest rates gonna make, plays such a big deal for corporates. You could even argue, I mean for a long time it was like, if interest rates go up after the global financial crisis, corporates are gonna get killed. It was the reverse and their earnings went up

00:22:06 [Speaker Changed] Just the street column. Why, why are corporate bonds on fire? Because they seem like such a safe bet.

00:22:13 [Speaker Changed] I I, that is exactly right. And there’s been, you know, market mechanisms that have in many cases actually improved the credit quality. So when we look at indices, you want to be careful because they’re not controlling for the historical credit quality. I mean, s and p 500 is different because it’s about earnings and you know, earnings power. But in terms of credit quality, you know, a lot of the indices, I mean the, the, the, the current composition is better than it used to be. Now we are at a certain stage in the cycle. So we’ve had two, two and a half years basically of, you know, a a fully employed labor force and strong growth. But there’s been, if you think about those two and a half years, 2023 is, you know, everybody’s waiting for a recession, right?

00:22:59 [Speaker Changed] And this, that never came, this

00:23:00 [Speaker Changed] News, I call that period the rolling vs. And we are kind of going through a similar version of the same thing right now, meaning

00:23:07 [Speaker Changed] Rolling decreases. So if you sectoral recessions that quickly,

00:23:12 [Speaker Changed] So, so actually what I mean, I call it, when I say the rolling vs. What I mean is that basically if you look back to late 2022 and you looked at, you know, the, the forward forecast that was in the macro consensus, it was growth is here, growth next quarter is gonna be lower in two quarters will be in a recession. And then of course we’ll have a recovery. And, and, and so if you’re looking, they were almost right. A so when the recession didn’t come, what the macro consensus did is simply rolled it forward. They said, no, we are right just wrong on timing. And then when that didn’t happen, we went and rolled it forward. And, and I mean I have this chart, it’s a little old now, but I I I on the same chart as you see the rolling vs. You look at the actual data when it came in and there is, you know, we are like way above closer to 3% than people are forecasting a recession. I, I I and, and so, and

00:24:08 [Speaker Changed] Those, those recession forecasts, we heard those in 21, 22, 23, like it, it, they kept doubling down and got it wrong.

00:24:16 [Speaker Changed] Yeah. So it’s 2023 and then the early part of 2024. So Des bank was, and and I don’t mean to single out our economists here, but who are excellent, but they, they were some of the earliest on the street of a recession is gonna happen down the road. They didn’t give up their recession call, I believe till the first quarter of 2024. And, and, and so from a company point of view, if you were listening to companies and, and you know, analysts ask on earnings calls, why aren’t you spending, they’re like, no, there is a recession coming and the recession is coming. So all through 2023, corporate America just waited for the recession that that

00:24:54 [Speaker Changed] Never came really quite

00:24:55 [Speaker Changed] Fasting comes early 24 and they began to wait for the election. A a we had the election, everybody got very, very optimistic, very, very constructive. We got liberation day. I think where we are now is those two years basically of waiting of created pent up demand is a shortcut way of saying what I’m trying to get at. And, and has also, you know, led to the approach or strategy, if you want to call it that, that we just need to deal with it and get on with it. And we’re not waiting anymore. I, I and, and, and so we are where we are where we’re having this strong growth, but it’s really the cyclical parts of the us, you know, are either erratic and noisy or at the bottom of the channel. So not exactly depressed and falling out of the channel or going into recession, but growing very modestly, huh. That is the basically the challenge that it creates for equity strategy or investment. Really,

00:25:54 [Speaker Changed] Really, really fascinating. Coming up, we continue our conversation with Binky Chadda chief US Equity and Global strategist and head of asset allocation at Deutsche Bank Securities, talking about his roles at Deutsche Bank. I’m Barry Ritholtz, you’re listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio.

00:26:36 I am Barry Ritholtz. You are listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio. My extra special guest today is Binky Chadda. He’s chief US Equity and global strategist as well as head of asset allocation at Deutsche Bank. Although he’s here in the US and has a lot of US clients, he is also a, a globe trotter and travels around the world, Europe, Asia, and elsewhere advising clients of Deutsche Bank. So, so before we get into what’s going on today in more detail, I want to talk a little bit about your role at Deutsche Bank. You’ve led US equity and global strategy for a couple of decades now. Yeah. How has your team, how has the team’s process evolved? What do you think of in terms of tools and quantitative analysis as well as a broad global macro overview? What, what drives your decision making? Sure,

00:27:34 [Speaker Changed] I mean, at the simplest level, it’s to figure out, you know, where the equity market is going to go.

00:27:40 [Speaker Changed] That’s all I need to do. Once you figure that out, you’re, you’re golden.

00:27:45 [Speaker Changed] It, it, it, we are pretty humble about that pursuit, but I would say that is the number one objective and pursuit. And what we do is basically we have developed over time basically a whole set of frameworks. They’re not all, you know, a a a I mean they’re meant to be non-overlapping frameworks and

00:28:07 [Speaker Changed] Quantitative or, or qualitative. Are they all models or is there some i i

00:28:11 [Speaker Changed] They’re quantitative frameworks you could call some of them models. I is. So the, i I would say the most important thing for equities, and again, my very humble opinion is what’s happening with earnings. And so you need to have a good framework basically for earnings. If you could get earnings, right? I mean, and you need to do that well in advance of the actual delivery. You know, you, you, you will know what the markets are going to do basically. So what we did, and we revisit, revise, revamp, redo, throw out, whatever you want to call it. But at the moment, basically what we have is we take a whole group of stocks and sectors, we divided up our way. So there’s mega cap growth in tech. I mean, and that, you know, needs to include Visa and MasterCard because it’s, they’re not tech companies, but they behave very, very similarly in terms of their revenue streams.

00:29:06 So you can think about it as basically a trend and cycle framework for each of the groups. And the question, the, the, the trend is, you know, what has basically been prevailing for quite a while. And then the question is what drives the cycle in those? So if we take mega cap growth in tech, for example, you would have the US dollar and, and, and for some parts you could be looking basically for, you know, a a a a very specific things that matter, which you’re not going to pick up. So for example, you know, for materials, I I, because of the way US materials is structured into two parts, a, a a for chemicals, you need basically a chemicals deflator, which is not something that most people tend to look at. So there’s idiosyncratic, but it’s cycle and trend in what drives basically the cycle. It would be, you know, ISM manufacturing the US dollar ISM manufacturing is an interesting one because that’s historically the one thing that explained s and p 500 earnings extremely well. And that’s kind of like all you needed to know still

00:30:12 [Speaker Changed] Today. Does it still have that

00:30:13 [Speaker Changed] Correlation still? It’s basically for the last three years it hasn’t been the case and, and, and why? It’s simply because of mega cap growth in tech. If you take the s and p 500, you break up its earnings into mega cap growth in tech and everyone else, you’ll see that everyone else is still currently aligned with the ISM manufacturing. ISM manufacturing’s been in a funk for three plus years now. And, and so we haven’t had growth. So I kind of hinted earlier, you can look at the current, you know, sort of context in a bearish way that is all the growth is coming from 90% of s and p 500 earnings growth has come from mega cap growth in tech. I I, or you could take the view going forward that everybody else is going to recover. That’s the camp that we are in because

00:31:01 [Speaker Changed] That everyone else will be catching up to tech events

00:31:03 [Speaker Changed] E Exactly. Unless EEE their earnings are completely aligned with the ISM manufacturing in the US ISM manufacturing’s basically. And, and that’s historically the case for the entire index is earnings. We’ve been in a funk for three plus years. We’ve been, ISM manufacturing’s been between 46 and 50. So, you know, it it, it’s something that we’ve never seen historically. So if you ask why are we sitting here? Well, first thing to note is that if you know things were bad, then we should have been going down. We shouldn’t be sitting in mildly contractionary. But 50

00:31:37 [Speaker Changed] Is the dividing point above 50

00:31:39 [Speaker Changed] 50 is the dividing point. But I mean, I think the fair, or I mean conceptually it’s the, an intellectually it’s meant to be the dividing point, but this is still slightly positive growth. Even below 50. To get to negative growth, you have to go quite a bit lower. And I would argue in the first instance, it was basically just the hangover from the pandemic. So you remember that as we came out, you know, we had basically massive spending on goods and that in some way involves manufacturing a, a and, and, and then we had basically the slowdown and the rotation

00:32:10 [Speaker Changed] Reminds me a little bit of what took place in the run up to Y 2K in 2000 you had all this tech spending pulled forward and then it was soft for a year or two,

00:32:20 [Speaker Changed] Right? Right. A, a a and, and it’s been followed basically by a whole set of things, number two on, so on the hangover, I would say, you know, I don’t think a hangover has killed anybody. So a hangover is holding time basically. And it would naturally basically, you know, a a a pass. But then in early 2022 we got the Russian invasion of Ukraine. We had $120 oil. And if you look at oil prices today, what we’ve had is basically we’ve gone from 120 to, in round numbers 60, but it’s taken three years to get there. And, and, and what the three years to get there means is that energy earnings have been on year in year basis have been negative basically, or contracting for three years now. The good news is that we are much closer now to basically what I would think of as fair value for oil prices. That’s actually a little bit higher. It’s not a tradable difference right now, but fair value is probably 64 or $65. And, and, and, and so, you know, this drag should basically stop soon, even though for the third quarter we are still looking for 15% down. So energy in energy, in energy earnings. So it is just mostly oil prices and energy vertical is important basically for various parts of manufacturing. Then we have basically idiosyncratic issues in autos and Chinese autos. And of course last but not least, we have the tariffs this year, which impacts manufacturing

00:34:00 [Speaker Changed] More. We’re gonna talk more about tariffs shortly. I’m kind of fascinated ’cause I’m hearing in your laying out where we are today, a lot of different voices and at a shop like Deutsche Bank Securities, you have to have so many different perspectives, opinions from different quarters, from the economists, from the FX traders, from everybody. How do you navigate and organize all of these different perspectives, some of which may be in conflict with others?

00:34:32 [Speaker Changed] Sure. IIII wouldn’t describe it as conflict. I mean, we are encouraged to have our own different views or a, a

00:34:39 [Speaker Changed] Broad dispersion of views. Is that a

00:34:41 [Speaker Changed] Fa better? Absolutely. So what I was always told by I, our head of research, David Foggers, Landau a a, you know, so if, if I ask you at the end of the year, why did you get your s and p 500 call wrong? You’re not to tell me that, you know,

00:34:58 [Speaker Changed] The economist was bearish, right? That doesn’t work.

00:35:03 [Speaker Changed] So you are responsible for everything that goes into your view. And, and so we discuss in debate. So as far as the research aspect of it is concerned in terms of the strategists across all asset classes and economists, we have a regular meeting. We just had one this morning actually.

00:35:22 [Speaker Changed] So let me ask you a question. You mentioned ISM what leading indicators do you put the most amount of weight on and what indicators do you think aren’t all that important for forecasting the economic and or market cycle?

00:35:38 [Speaker Changed] So we always start with our economist forecast and we always ask the question of does this make sense to us? Does this make sense to, you know, the way various a, a a, you know, economic data are behaving? So I mean if you think about the us so in 2023 when everybody’s calling for a recession, there was this annoying fact, which was if you simply said, okay, I just landed here. So you know, okay, we are talking about the US potentially going into a recession, you know, let me start by looking at GDP and you would find that near 70% of us, GDP in real terms comes from personal consumption spending. Everybody knows that. So why don’t we just draw a chart of it and, and, and because I come from a a, a relatively volatile asset class, I don’t do in growth rate terms, so just plot the level you gotta take logs because of, we all know why we should take logs.

00:36:38 And then I draw channels around it. And if you look at real personal cons, you know, personal consumption spending in the US for the five years before the pandemic, we are in this tight channel growing steadily at two and a half percent a year, pandemic collapse, recovery of PCE back magically into exactly the same channel magically. And so this is 21 and and the same applies during 22. And the Fed is hiking aggressively, right? And personal spending just continues in the middle of the chow. And, and it was almost like there’s nothing to see here,

00:37:15 [Speaker Changed] Right? Well we had three, three handle on unemployment, wages were actually rising as fast, almost as, as fast as inflation. Other than that 9% peak, why wouldn’t the economy and market do well?

00:37:29 [Speaker Changed] And, and, and to just, he

00:37:30 [Speaker Changed] Says with perfect hindsight,

00:37:32 [Speaker Changed] To fast forward to this morning, where is PCE? It’s right in the middle of the channel. I would say if you, you know, there’s a couple of different variations of looking at it and in the headline numbers actually at the top of the channel and moving along and, and you know, we did have some slowing in the first quarter a a but it was at the risk of going way outta the channel and it just sort of moderated and went flat and, and, and since it got back to the channel. So it’s the same thing. And that’s why I’m saying and

00:38:02 [Speaker Changed] PC is important ’cause that’s a key indicator of the Fed looks

00:38:05 [Speaker Changed] At it’s percent of the US GDP. Yeah, right. Absolutely. I

00:38:08 [Speaker Changed] Think that’s Jerome Powell’s favorite data point. Yeah,

00:38:11 [Speaker Changed] I I, so he focuses more on the inflation in there. So I’m talking about really the real volume or that measure that we have, which is in, in, in real terms, I’m just saying, I I i, if that’s 70% of gdp DP and that’s growing steadily and it’s been doing, so we, we in the same place that we’ve been in for 10 years, growing in, you know, at what I would describe as a 2.5% trend rate. So, so

00:38:34 [Speaker Changed] That, that, that sounds pretty bullish. I’m gonna ask you in a little bit about cautious issues and risks. We’ll circle back to that. Sure, sure. But given the relative strength of the US over the past 10 to 15 years and the fact that you’ve just gotten back from Asia and Europe before that, how do you look at the rest of the global economy? What’s happening in Asia, what’s happening in developed ex-US Europe and and elsewhere?

00:39:02 [Speaker Changed] Absolutely. I, so, you know, there’s a chart that I’m going to draw for you or really two charts and, and, and what I would say, I kind of already described the US chart, which is, you know, a, a a, a steady trend channel growth of two and a half percent before the pandemic steady, you know, two and a half percent growth since then. I, I I, if you look at the rest of the world, the trend rates are different. So if you use Europe as an example, but the same applies basically to various other regions. We were growing steadily before the pandemic at sort of a 2% rate, then we had the pandemic collapse and just like the US recovering back basically to the trend line. But that was in the first quarter of 2022. So it is really Russia, Ukraine that then basically arrested that recovery back the trend and, and, and basically activity in Europe, you know, it’s essentially gone sideways to very slightly up in the decimal points I would say.

00:40:05 And, and, and so there’s a very large gap basically relative to trend. And so what I would argue is that, you know, there was nothing exceptional happening in the US in absolute terms. It was really in relative terms because the rest of the world wasn’t really growing. And I’m using Europe as an example, you know, China, Japan’s slightly different, but it, it, it, I I think the European example is sort of key. And, and, and so if you think about things like FX and the US dollar, I mean we, US dollar typically does long multi-year cycles. We were sitting at the top of the band for three years. So I think about it as a multi-year trade or trend, basically waiting for a catalyst and waiting for the catalyst is just, you know, is the rest of the world going to start to grow? And in the case of Europe, you know what we had basically, so we went long European equities on the first Monday of the year, all the credit goes to my colleague, European equity strategist, max. That’s

00:41:11 [Speaker Changed] A great great

00:41:12 [Speaker Changed] Call. I, I i i, it was just the view that everybody was short Europe, everybody’s going to cover their shorts or at least some people are gonna cover their shorts going into the election, given the platforms which they began to do. And after they covered their shorts, it became a question of, you know, from a fundamental point of view, you know, is this gonna happen now in terms of policies is gonna happen? So if you look back for the last few years, you know, as a policymaker you want to do something about this, but maybe that shock was already gone and, and you’re gonna start growing anyway. And, and, and so now you have that plus a a, a whole set of additional, you know, incentives to basically to spend infrastructure. Then there’s the defense issue. So I would argue it happens.

00:42:06 [Speaker Changed] And, and is this early days in in the resurrection of European equities or is this a one year, one time? So

00:42:16 [Speaker Changed] It, it depends on whether you believe the growth will happen and sustain. I’m in that camp, so I I I would argue it’s still very early days. And so we are actually, from a positioning point of view, we are overweight the us which is what we’ve been talking about, but we’re also overweight Europe and overweight Europe, not because I’m expecting it to match the US in performance through year end,

00:42:37 [Speaker Changed] Just doing so much better than it used to.

00:42:40 [Speaker Changed] But, but, but I think it’s important to keep in mind that so far we have very little evidence that Europe is actually growing and, and if anything over the last few weeks, the data has kind of disappointed. It doesn’t negate what is likely to come. And, and then you look at the Europe, I mean, you know, getting disappointment. We, we, we moved up because Europe might grow and, and, and you know, it hasn’t, but you know, we have trouble getting below one 16. So the market is, you know, very much I would say, you know, concerned that the growth actually happens. So I’m, I’m staying overweight because there, it, it, you have to get in before it happens. And given the gap basically in the level of activity, in the level of earnings relative to trend lines, you know, you, you, you, you could gap up at some point really. And, and so it’s not just about tomorrow’s earnings numbers. So we start getting positive growth news outta Europe.

00:43:45 [Speaker Changed] All bets are off at that point.

00:43:46 [Speaker Changed] EEE, exactly. At that point it’s already half of it’s already happened, so. Wow.

00:43:51 [Speaker Changed] So let’s talk a little bit about US economic growth. We, we earlier discussed Asia and Europe, you have said we have resilient corporate earnings with, with forecasts that are in the low double digits, robust risk appetite and major buybacks that are likely to rise as earnings rise. What’s not to like about the US market?

00:44:19 [Speaker Changed] Not too much, I would say. I think that, you know, going back to what I said earlier, 2023 we’re waiting for the recession, 2024 waiting for the election. There’s a lot basically of demand pen hub demand that in for a variety of activities.

00:44:38 [Speaker Changed] Ance you, you’re talking pre 2020, November, 2024. So the prior year,

00:44:43 [Speaker Changed] Right. But, but what I’m saying is that the, while you know the backdrop and the context has been very good. It’s been very strong. It hasn’t really been, there hasn’t really been buy into it because there’s been something massive to worry about, like a recession in 2023, right? A a and, and so I would argue after the liberation day shock, so I would say around the election last year, there was a lot of buy-in to a very optimistic take. So we spent, one of our frameworks that we spend a lot of energy on is our equity positioning framework. And, and if you look at where we are today, and that’s what I’m saying, there’s limited buy-in is my positioning measure. It’s a Z score measure. So typically between plus minus one, it’s sitting at plus 0.5. But what I would point out, so market’s clearly overweight, that entire overweight characterization is coming from the positioning of systematic strategies who are not following or thinking about fundamentals. If you think about the design,

00:45:45 [Speaker Changed] When we say systematic, it’s quantitative, it’s trend based, it’s earnings growth based.

00:45:49 [Speaker Changed] So EEI have three in particular in mind. So there’s vol control, there’s the CTAs and then there’s risk parity funds,

00:45:57 [Speaker Changed] CTAs meaning mostly trend following commodities, things like that. E

00:46:00 [Speaker Changed] Exactly. So it’s about trend and vol. A a is a good summary of each of the three, basically. I mean, and if you look at systematic strategies, positioning, you know, it it, it’s hard to come up with an intuitive, simple measure of what is the trend and that, that, that’s what a lot of that exercise is about. But the other part is very easy, which is basically vol. You can use any measure of vol that you like. Hmm. And, and and, and it explains basically their positioning. So we had liberation day collapse, a a we had April the ninth when the cause of the volatility basically diminished or went down. And so we had the fastest recovery from a wall shock ever. And, and, and, but there’s been very limited buy-in, I would say, from discretionary investors who are actually sitting at neutral discretionary as opposed to systematic, but discretionary. You want to think about as fundamentals based investors. Let,

00:46:58 [Speaker Changed] Let’s take that apart ’cause that’s kind of fascinating. ’cause on the one hand there’s been a bubble in bubble forecast. That’s an old joke. We’ve heard that, you know, for decades. But really it seems like everybody is saying, oh, there’s an AI bubble, there’s a market concentration bubble, and the the market seems to not care and it just keeps powering itself higher. Let, let’s talk about the policy issues you just raised. So despite Trump won with some tariffs that were, I don’t know, about 10%, and I’m tariff, man, it’s the most beautiful word in the dictionary. Despite all of that, a a failure of imagination are all on all our parts. April 2nd, shocked everybody with a hundred percent tariffs. I I don’t think anybody imagined it. And we had that very rapid sell off over the next week, then the 90 day pause and markets took off. But at the end of the 90 day pause, markets just kind of kept going. Kept

00:48:00 [Speaker Changed] Going. Yeah. How,

00:48:01 [Speaker Changed] How do you, how do you put this policy into context? And when you say there’s not buy-in from the discretionary part of the equity markets, somebody’s buying, is it just systematic or it’s,

00:48:13 [Speaker Changed] So it’s systematic strategies. And I would say, you know, we are sitting here in the first week of October, so if you think about September and, and, and just the very, very steady steep climb,

00:48:24 [Speaker Changed] Huge gains in time.

00:48:25 [Speaker Changed] So, so what we got in September is basically big inflows.

00:48:30 [Speaker Changed] We right. And I wanna say Q3 2025 was like the seventh best quarter going back to World War ii, some crazy number like that.

00:48:40 [Speaker Changed] I I I, so last month we had the highest inflow into bonds and equities as a group ever since $2 billion into just one month. Do

00:48:54 [Speaker Changed] Do you pay attention or care about the $7 trillion in money market funds? Or is that, you know, I, i

00:49:00 [Speaker Changed] A, so I think that’s partly a red herring in the sense that basically it is a reallocation away from bank deposits. So if you take a sum of money market funds and ca and cash deposits, the line’s kind of going up, but it’s going up in line with it’s trend because cash holdings are going up. So the two things are just sort of a

00:49:23 [Speaker Changed] Wash. ’cause some people are, have been claiming that is the next source of fuel for equities. I’m in your camp. I think that money mostly came from low yielding bonds or checking and savings accounts. Yeah, not, I,

00:49:36 [Speaker Changed] I think it’s like very important to keep in mind that we’re having a boom in inflows across all asset classes, really. And it’s been going on for two years, if not longer. And, and, and you know, as to the question of why we are having this boom, our take is basically that. So you have to start historically first. So if we’re talking about, you know, how things changed relative to history, so a a a, the, the pattern was that US households would put about 50% of the new savings. So you get a paycheck, you spend some is left in the bank account and then you allocate basically some of it. But historically, about half of all household savings, it, it would stay in cash. Half would basically go into financial assets. And so if you think about the cash holdings of households, it’s very, very steady, clear trend line, what the pandemic did, partly because people spent less, partly because they were getting checks in the mail or directly deposited in their bank accounts, the, their cash holdings went way, way up relative to trend.

00:50:51 We then had a period where, because you just over-allocated relative to trend a, a a a period of cash going sideways so that all new savings, a hundred percent of it was going into financial assets and into all financial assets is not just, I mean bonds were actually the bigger beneficiary than equities, believe it or not really. Most people think it’s equities first, but it’s a across that, so crypto, you know, commodity funds, you name it a a, but, but, but it goes all the way back to the pandemic and, and, and, and, and it’s not done yet, is the way I would put it.

00:51:29 [Speaker Changed] Wow. So, so you were talking about trade earlier. One of the comments you made really, I found fascinating markets often price and trade deal hopes early. Are, are we over discounting the impact of tariffs or are markets being too optimistic or how, how do you contextualize, you know, we’ve been waiting to hear about all these tariff deals we really haven’t heard of. I think we have one with the UK that’s kind of kind of IT and Japan, right?

00:52:02 [Speaker Changed] Are

00:52:03 [Speaker Changed] Are, are markets not paying enough attention to tariffs or are markets saying, Hey, president lost at the court of trade, he lost at the court of appeals, maybe he’s gonna lose it, the Supreme Court. How, how are we looking at tariffs?

00:52:18 [Speaker Changed] So, so the, the a a a, so first, you know, a a a a confession, which is basically after April the second, you know, if you thought through the impact of the announced tariffs, you are gonna come to a very, very negative conclusion, right? And that’s what we did. And so we lowered our numbers. We always built in that there would be what we call a relent on policies. It’s just like trade war 1.0 when the market is up, you know, he would escalate when the market was down, he would deescalate. People

00:52:51 [Speaker Changed] Have have called that I, I heard a couple of options. Traders call that the Trump collar.

00:52:57 [Speaker Changed] The Trump collar.

00:52:58 [Speaker Changed] So unlike the Powell put, this is the Trump collar right at when markets are high, he’s embolden when they’re low. Alright, we’re gonna pause this and let the dust settle.

00:53:07 [Speaker Changed] Exactly. Exactly. A a a that’s kind of, you know, where we were. And, and so the call was that we would go a lot higher, but a lot less than we had originally thought basically. And, and we have since basically raised both our earnings numbers and our target. I started

00:53:26 [Speaker Changed] What’s your s and p 500 to 7,000.

00:53:28 [Speaker Changed] So on, on January 1st it was 7,000 and today it’s again, back to 7,019, lower

00:53:33 [Speaker Changed] It you, it goes the tariffs and

00:53:34 [Speaker Changed] Then raised it again and then raised it in two steps. But your question on, you know, a, are the tariffs having an impact? What I would say is that there’s sort of different dimensions. So this is kind of a big question because it impacts everything. So first is growth. We kind of spoke about that a little bit, macro growth and, and, and what I would say is that so far there is, I mean the, the, the, the logical and intellectual case for a slowing because of very high tariffs or a new tax, right? You know, it is impossible to refute. And I’m not refuting it, but I’m just saying there’s like no evidence of that because what other things are basically dominating? So I talked about the consumers are doing what they’ve always been doing, et cetera, a, a, a, but if you look at macro growth, I also said that what we are going through is a mini version of 2023 because everybody took a negative view that negativity is extremely important part of the positivity in terms of the price action because markets

00:54:37 [Speaker Changed] Climb a wall of

00:54:38 [Speaker Changed] Worry. Right? Exactly. And, and, and, and, and you know, our equity’s gonna go down if somebody raises their GDP growth numbers or their earnings numbers. So it’s so that negativity is a positive force for now i, our economists, so Matt ti has 2.8% GDP growth number for the third quarter. That’s, you know, the highest numbers I’ve ever seen from him.

00:55:01 [Speaker Changed] Atlanta, GDP now is even higher now it’s close

00:55:03 [Speaker Changed] To four. Yeah. Before the data started to disappear, a, a, a and, and, and so, you know, a, a number one, no sign of it in terms of growth, if you do and think about in terms of earnings. So there should have been a big impact in the second quarter earnings growth in the second quarter actually picked up from where it was in the first quarter. So even the sign is wrong, it’s going in the other direction. A a number three qualitative read on earnings, which I would argue is more important than just the numbers and companies just basically saying that yes, this is a negative shock. Yes, it’s a big deal, but it’s, you know, it’s not way out of basically the realm of, in many cases, even for machinery companies within the realm of, you know, our guidance range. So yes, it’s negative, but it’s not having such a huge impact.

00:55:56 Huh? And, and, and that the impacts are basically, you know, modest and manageable. I is a level at which, you know, you can think about, so we, we, the numbers, what are the numbers? I I, so the effective tariff rate defined as basically tariff revenue on the treasury’s website divided by the value of imported goods, it was kind of stuck at 10, 11% and maybe it’s a little bit higher right now. So the market’s working with something like 15. So we still have a ways to basically get there. I i, and the underlying thesis has been basically that if there’s a problem, you will get relent on exemptions. So there’s a lot of exemptions. And, and, and that’s part of the whole thing, huh? Really? The other dimension of course is inflation. I would, so let’s talk about that. Yeah, yeah. I, I, I, you know, did it already happen or is it still to come one simple way, I mean, is there’s no way to answer the question with a hundred percent certainty, but what I would say is that if I take a look at core goods prices or core CPI, if you want, and, and what you’ll see is that the norm is for goods prices to be deflating.

00:57:10 And we have the post pandemic, 10% increases the chart of the price level, right? We jump up by 10, 11% in a relatively short period of time. And then that’s done with, and we start dis inflating at the same historical trend rate is a very modest, mild deflation. And what we’ve had over the last three months is a clear increase up. So some impact of the tariffs has already happened. Question is how much, and, and, and I would say relative to the trend line, core goods prices are probably one, one and a quarter percent higher than they would’ve been if we had just continued basically down that trend line. And, and, and so how to basically, you know, handicapped that one, one and a quarter percent we have in-house from our rate strategist, a bottom up measure basically of the direct impact of tariffs. So you go SIC code by SIC code, you add it up and then you calculate and they calculate two, two point a half percent. So simple point I would make is it looks like half of it, the direct impact already happened. And if half of it, you know, it, it wasn’t so bad, the how much should we fear the second half

00:58:24 [Speaker Changed] Coming up, we continue our conversation with Binky Chadda, chief US Equity and Global Strategist and head of asset allocation at Deutsche Bank Securities talking about his roles at Deutsche Bank. I’m Barry Ritholtz, you’re listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio.

00:58:58 I am Barry Ritholtz. You are listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio. My extra special guest today is Binky Chadda. He’s Chief US Equity and Global Strategist, as well as Head of Asset Allocation at Deutsche Bank. You are very constructive about additional federal reserve rate cuts this year and next year, and the people who are a little bearish on that are saying, Hey, tariffs are gonna be very inflationary. We we’re seeing a re-acceleration. This isn’t a noisy blip, but it’s a start of something worse. We’re gonna end up at four, four and a half, 5% inflation, which would put the Fed on hold. Walk us through your thinking on how many more rate cuts this year and next year. It sounds like you’ve already given the game away ’cause

00:59:44 [Speaker Changed] No, no, actually, actually, you know, I, I’m not counting on rate cuts and I would argue the rate cuts are, you know, much more of a sideshow basically really for earnings. We do have,

00:59:54 [Speaker Changed] We’re so hyperfocused on them, at least the media sure is on it. It’s, you know, everybody is, if we get these rate cuts, it’ll unfreeze the housing market, it’ll do all these great things.

01:00:07 [Speaker Changed] No, I mean, for the, to unfreeze the housing market, you need longer end yields to basically go down,

01:00:11 [Speaker Changed] Which have not happened yet. Yeah,

01:00:13 [Speaker Changed] There, there are pretty much on the low side I would argue relative to, so we have a house view for the 10 year by year end that’s closer to four and a half, so 4 45. So

01:00:24 [Speaker Changed] We, what does that mean for mortgage rates? Are we gonna see a five handle on mortgage rates?

01:00:29 [Speaker Changed] So that’s a pretty wide, so there is room if and, and spreads depend on volatility rates. Volatility’s been coming down quite a lot because, you know, the a a a brokers need to hedge basically the interest rate risk while it’s outstanding. So, so I think it’s supportive, but, but, but I I I, I’m not foreseeing any big decline in interest rates.

01:00:51 [Speaker Changed] So maybe another cut this year, one or two more next year. Yeah,

01:00:54 [Speaker Changed] It’s also, I mean, we don’t have the data anymore, so it’s gonna become,

01:00:58 [Speaker Changed] Well, there’s that

01:01:00 [Speaker Changed] A a a who

01:01:01 [Speaker Changed] Needs

01:01:01 [Speaker Changed] Data, but, but, but I wouldn’t be surprised if the Fed misses one of those two meetings in terms of the rate cuts and pushes it out. I mean, this is sort of more a, you know, fine tuning type exercise, I would argue. I mean, if the Atlanta Fed GDP is right, and it’s been pretty right for several years, obviously not to all the decimals, but it was giving you some, you know, with that kind of growth. I mean, do we really need lower interest rates?

01:01:28 [Speaker Changed] So let me ask the Jerome Powell question. We’re seeing the labor market sort of soften, even though we’re fairly close to, to, you know, as low as unemployment gets. At the same time, there, there are shortage of workers 2025 may be the first year in history where US population actually declines. Declines, yeah. Less immigration, more deportations, a whole lot of other policy issues that are affecting that. How do you think about the labor market here and what does that mean for corporate earnings? What does it mean for interest rate policy? Yeah, I

01:02:05 [Speaker Changed] I I, I think we have a relatively fully employed labor force and, and, and our baseline view basically sees, you know, if you ignore the decimals, a little bit of bounce here and there not really, you know, changing very much. So the question becomes, you know, who’s gonna produce that three and 4% GDP? So it, it, it was pretty bearish take when we got the revisions basically to the payroll’s numbers, the benchmark revision. But, you know, if you’re not changing the GDP numbers and you just doesn’t matter, raise the level of productivity basically. Right. Commensurate

01:02:41 [Speaker Changed] It’s not a, it’s not as much of a negative as it looks at first blush

01:02:44 [Speaker Changed] E Exactly right.

01:02:46 [Speaker Changed] Don’t I, I know a lot of economists who look at growth as productivity plus inflation. Fair, fair assessment.

01:02:53 [Speaker Changed] Yeah, I would say productivity plus employment. Then to get to the nominal part, you would add inflation and, and, and so a a I mean, if you think about, so we talked a little bit about, you know, the, the parallels between today and the 1960s and the, the second half of the 1990s, that’s the two periods since World War ii where we had basically productivity growing at three, 3.5% it for a sustained period of time. Normally it grows at 1.4, 1.5%. What,

01:03:26 [Speaker Changed] What’s the old line? I, I forget who I’m stealing this from. Productivity gains are seen everywhere except the productivity data.

01:03:35 [Speaker Changed] So that’s because, you know, it, it, it’s calculated as a residual, right? So first you have to estimate GDP, then you have the first revision, second revision, third revision, A, a, a, then you have to estimate what we were just talking about, which is the labor input, which is revised and then revised right. And benchmark. And then what’s left over is productivity. But what I would argue is that if you look at a simple chart of reported productivity in the non-farm business sector, you know, you’ll see this a a a a growing in a trend channel of 1.4%. And, and, and basically what we’ve had over the last couple years is we went way above the channel basically. And, and so

01:04:17 [Speaker Changed] Post pandemic, post

01:04:18 [Speaker Changed] It, it, it, that is right. So we got a pandemic jump, then a slowdown back into the channel and, and, and so over the last two years is what I’m saying. So officially, you know, yes, the, the, the immigration issue, but officially unemployment’s only been 4% was even lower. So it was a tight, historically a tight labor market has been a necessary condition for getting those productivity booms like we had in the 1960s and, and, and in the second half of the nineties. And we’ve had a tight labor market for several years right now. Huh.

01:04:51 [Speaker Changed] Very, very interesting. One of the things I’m so fascinated about your work is that you’re not just, you know, a one-way bull. You start the year as one of the most bullish forecasts for the s and p 500, but you’re constantly bringing up the various macro risks. Investors face that sort of full view and, and not being so, so just mindlessly bullish is kind of fascinating. So, so let’s talk about some of the risks that, that Sure. You’ve been writing about and discussing. Have to start with froth and AI and, and capital spending. Sure. How do you respond to charges that this market has become frothy?

01:05:40 [Speaker Changed] A a what I would say is basically that, you know, we do see signs basically of rampant speculation, but I would say so far it’s only in basically relatively well-defined pockets.

01:05:56 [Speaker Changed] So AI, Bitcoin hit 125,000 over the weekend. So

01:06:00 [Speaker Changed] IIAA on ai, I would say it’s, you know, what some companies and some deals are doing, you could put in that bucket, but I mean, the stocks are not necessarily doing that. And so I would argue that we are still sort of in the early stages, I would say there’s a lot of focus on the retail investor. Now, the question I would ask about the retail investor is, you know, I I I, when you look at measures of retail participation or retail activity, you know, it’s easy to sort of exaggerate relative to their own history. I mean, we don’t have a history of retail particip participation in US equity since the nineties. So it’s been more episodic, basically. And so there is a tendency to put it in that light that this is an episode, but I mean, we were talking about Asia earlier, it’s a long history of retail involvement in all markets. And so one of the things that is getting attention is the presence of retail investors, but from a quantitative point of view, I dunno, I was looking at statistics. So there’s conflicting measures and

01:07:13 [Speaker Changed] It’s fairly modest and a lot of it seems to be 401k and Ira

01:07:16 [Speaker Changed] Invested I this whole thing about how, you know, the volumes have taken off and they’ve skyrocketed, and now they account for 4% of

01:07:23 [Speaker Changed] Tiny

01:07:24 [Speaker Changed] Exactly. So everything is, you know, consistent and correct, but I I would now this is, you

01:07:30 [Speaker Changed] Have to frame it appropriately.

01:07:32 [Speaker Changed] Yeah. And, and, and this is a cycle and we’re talking about now, but basically, and this is, you know, me speaking as equities, we, it’s a cyclical asset. Okay. And, and, and so if the cycle continues the way that it has been continuing, all of this is going to grow. But today we are not there yet.

01:07:51 [Speaker Changed] What about market concentration, the, the magnificent seven or whatever you wanna call the top 10? Sure. Is that as big a, is that really a thread, or is that, you know, this happens from time to time when a new technology attracts all this attention and capital.

01:08:06 [Speaker Changed] So I mean, and I I I would put it slightly differently. I would say the market concentration in mega cap growth in tech reflects the concentration of s and p 500 earnings in the mega cap growth and tax.

01:08:18 [Speaker Changed] What are they? Something like 2 trillion in revenue, 300 billion in profits, some, some crazy number.

01:08:23 [Speaker Changed] Yeah. They, they, they’re responsible right now for about 40% of s and p 500 earnings. So

01:08:29 [Speaker Changed] Why shouldn’t they be 40% of the market cap? E,

01:08:32 [Speaker Changed] EE, E. Exactly. So they, they’re actually 30% of earnings and 40% of the market cap. I apologize. Oh, so

01:08:39 [Speaker Changed] Why, why are they so overweight? Is it just future growth expectations?

01:08:43 [Speaker Changed] They, they’re, they’re, they’re, they’re growing faster, so they should definitely have higher multiples there. So, so, so, you know, people frame the question as focused on the mega cap growth in tech. You can ask the equivalent question. Actually, it’s a bigger part than 60%. Why isn’t everybody else growing? I got into this a little bit earlier. It’s a, it’s a very peculiar recovery where the cyclical parts basically haven’t really kicked in in a big way, but it looks like they’re kicking in

01:09:08 [Speaker Changed] What other sectors are kicking in you? We, I know you’ve written about financials, consumer cyclicals materials, and then we could talk about em and, and small cap and value. Sure. What other sectors have been lagging that you find particularly interesting?

01:09:25 [Speaker Changed] So right now, you know, we have what I call simple cyclical tilt to our positioning, because I talked about discretionary investors sitting at neutral. Why are they sitting at neutral? Because they’re concerned about the cycle. What are they gonna buy if they get off and start participating in a bigger way? I would argue they will buy the cyclicals because that’s their concern. They’re unlikely to buy mega cap growth in tech for well known reasons. All the reasons that you basically mentioned. So, you know, if you phrase it from, you can phrase the question basically from who’s actually gonna buy this stuff? I would argue this group stands out and, and, and, and their concern suggests that they would buy the cyclicals if they started to believe that the cycle is gonna be fine. If you look at it from a fundamental point of view, no, I mean, there aren’t no signs of a huge uptick on the signal side, but if you wait for those signs, equity market will price it far before, I mean, one of the lessons that I take away is you have to think about the s and p 500 in a recession.

01:10:26 You have this brick shaded period, equity market falls 20% once the recessions, you know, starts it, it, but it robustly bottoms around the middle of the recession. Right, right.

01:10:37 [Speaker Changed] Long

01:10:38 [Speaker Changed] Before and, and recovers while you are still in this gray shaded area. So if you wait till payrolls turn negative, you’ll have missed the entire move and you will be back to, you know, basically that V again, catching that small EE Exactly. So a, a equities turn up when there’s a positive probability that you’re going to basically have a recovery because you’ve been in a recession for so long, you,

01:11:03 [Speaker Changed] You’ve identified a number of risks earlier in the year. And I’m curious if, if you still think they are significant protectionist trade policies and immigration policies are, are those still potential growth pressures or, or inflation pressures?

01:11:19 [Speaker Changed] I, I, I, I, I think on the tariffs, basically they’ve proved to be a modest E-E-E-E-E. Exactly. And, and, and so I don’t worry about that. I don’t think it closes the issue. I mean, there could still be negatives that come outta that, that we are just not completely aware of yet. But in that event, you know, a big part of our thesis for this year has been that I, I I, if things get bad, you know, at the end of the day, any administration cares about its approval ratings, the approval ratings about the economy. So they will relent and especially if it’s caused by one of the policies. So that’s been a big part of our thesis for staying constructive through the year. A a A I. So, you know, we talk about risks, and I am deeply aware of what most people mean when they talk about risks. But where we are sitting A-A-A-I-I, I would argue that it, it, it is my duty to simply point out that right now I’m much more concerned about upside risks than downside. Risks

01:12:20 [Speaker Changed] Melts up a potential A, a

01:12:22 [Speaker Changed] A a. Yes. Because we don’t, we stop worrying about going into a recession, we stop worrying about the politics and, and, and, and, and we stop worrying about the tariffs because companies are dealing with it.

01:12:34 [Speaker Changed] And suddenly there are blue skies out there.

01:12:36 [Speaker Changed] EEEE. Exactly. So,

01:12:39 [Speaker Changed] So, so last question before I get to my favorite questions. Okay. What do you think investors are not paying attention to? We’re not talking about that perhaps they should, could be a policy, could be an asset class. What do you think is getting overlooked?

01:12:54 [Speaker Changed] The, the context that we are in, what I was talking about, basically that a 3% GDP growth with a 4% unemployment happens only five or 6% of the time. And, and it unleashes certain dynamics. And, and, and, you know, it started with during the previous administration, it has continued in this administration, so it’s not necessarily about the policies. So

01:13:21 [Speaker Changed] We found a lot of noise and a lot of headlines and a lot of news coverage. Is that obscuring what is fundamentally underneath everything, a robust economy and a healthy market?

01:13:33 [Speaker Changed] I believe so, yeah.

01:13:34 [Speaker Changed] Huh. Really, really interesting stuff. Let, let’s jump to our favorite questions, starting with the question that brought me to you, which is, who are your mentors who helped shape your career? So many people, so many guests of this show have mentioned you who helped shape your career

01:13:53 [Speaker Changed] Well, so I started my career at the research department at the IMF and most important mentor, I would say was my boss is a gentleman called Michael Dooley, ex Federal Reserve, you know, a at some of the highest levels, but was at the IMF. Then he, I, I was just out of graduate school. He taught me basically how to think critically, how to stand on my own feet, and most importantly, how to communicate things or the essence of things in a very simple way. Hmm. He

01:14:30 [Speaker Changed] That’s great. Great answer. Let’s talk about books. What are some of your favorites? What are you reading currently?

01:14:35 [Speaker Changed] So I’m definitely a fiction reader. It gives me a good break from where I live and what I do. I’m currently reading Isabel aide’s books. I’m currently on a Long Pedal by the Sea, which is a book about Chile.

01:14:52 [Speaker Changed] Hmm. Really interesting. What about streaming outside of this show? What are you watching? Listening to? What, what keeps you entertained when you have a little downtime? Oh, given

01:15:01 [Speaker Changed] My background, I’m definitely big Bollywood fan. Oh,

01:15:04 [Speaker Changed] Really?

01:15:06 [Speaker Changed] Yeah. I’m very partial to Indian movies. And, and

01:15:10 [Speaker Changed] Give us a title that some of ’em are, listen, might

01:15:12 [Speaker Changed] Enjoy the one that I really liked, it’s Own Prime, actually. It’s called Tav, T-A-N-D-A-V.

01:15:20 [Speaker Changed] What’s that about?

01:15:21 [Speaker Changed] It’s about politics. Oh, really? And political career. And unfortunately they did not allow the, the season two to be, the authorities didn’t allow season two to in India.

01:15:36 [Speaker Changed] They stopped it from going on in India. They stopped.

01:15:38 [Speaker Changed] Wow. Yeah. Yeah.

01:15:39 [Speaker Changed] Well, thank goodness, nothing like that would ever happened

01:15:41 [Speaker Changed] Here. But you still watch season one. Yeah.

01:15:43 [Speaker Changed] All right. Our final two questions. What sort of advice would you give a recent college grad interest in a career in either economic policy analysis, asset allocation, or just investing?

01:15:56 [Speaker Changed] Yeah, I think that, you know, a, a working on Wall Street or in finance, I mean, there’s a lot of different things you can do. And I think for young people starting out, the biggest challenge is to figure out where, you know, how do I match basically what I’m most interested in and what, where my abilities are. And, and my advice would be to go with where you are interests are, the ability will come. I just went through recruiting process and just hired somebody from our grad program on onto my team. Yeah.

01:16:29 [Speaker Changed] Interesting. And our final question, what do you know about the world of economics and investing today would’ve been helpful when you were starting out back at the IMF in, in the 1990s

01:16:41 [Speaker Changed] To ignore everything except the economy. You, you all heard this expression, right? About presidential elections. It’s about the economy. Stupid. Right?

01:16:51 [Speaker Changed] Still

01:16:51 [Speaker Changed] Accurate. And, and s the s and p 500 is about earnings, period, positioning, valuation that all kinds of fits in and, and the but, but the underlying trend is all basically coming from earnings. You know?

01:17:06 [Speaker Changed] Totally, totally fascinating. Thank you Binky for being so generous with your time. We have been speaking with Binky Chadda. He is the Chief US Equity and Global Strategist and head of asset allocation at Deutsche Bank Securities. If you enjoy this conversation, well be sure to check out any of the 577 we’ve done over the past 11 years. You can find those at iTunes, Spotify, Bloomberg, YouTube, or wherever you get your favorite podcasts. Be sure and check out my new book, how not to invest the ideas, numbers, and behaviors that destroy wealth and how to avoid them, how not to invest at your favorite bookseller. I would be remiss if I did not thank the correct team that helps put these conversations together each week. Alexis Noriega is my video producer, Anna Luke is my producer. Sage Bauman is the head of podcast at Bloomberg. Sean Russo is my researcher. I’m Barry Ritholtz. You’ve been listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio.

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