Monday, October 01, 2007

Todays Reads

Bill Gross Still Mr. Bond Bull
Bill Gross is still bullish on bonds owing to the housing downturn that shows not end in sight and the potentially larger impact of housing than of stock prices. His firm (PIMCO) has rule out of thumb that says a "Fed easing cycle historically has required a destination of 1% real short rates or lower. Under a conservative assumption of 2.5% inflation, that implies Fed Funds at 3.75% or so over the next 6-12 months." And he suggest that such forecast is not totally out of the realm of possibility give than the Bernanke Fed might have asymmetric reaction to asset price movements al la Governor Kohn emulating an escalator on the way up (25bp increases) and an elevator on the way down (50bp reduction).

Investment Outlook - What Do They Know?
October 2007
Bill Gross

If you’re struggling to find something that symbolizes the transition from the old-fashioned markets of yesteryear to the seemingly inexplicable wildness of today’s derivative-driven, conduit-imploding financial complex, you need look no further than the contrast between old television’s Louis Rukeyser and thoroughly modern Jim Cramer. Calm, stately, with deep-throated baritone certainty, Rukeyser was the spokesman for aging boomers who wanted assurance that a nostril-snorting bull market would reign supreme. No less a cheerleader, but with soprano-inflected importuning decibels louder than any rival on the flat screen, Cramer, in recent weeks at least, has been willing to recognize that the momentum could turn in favor of the visiting bears. At a moment of courageous yet seemingly reckless abandon during a week when Treasury, Fed, and White House officials were trying to calm investors with an “all clear” story line, Cramer screamed at the CNBC camera, “They know nothing, they know nothing!” Just who “they” were was left to the imagination, but it was clear that in Cramer’s world Rukeyserian bullishness was not the order of the day. (more...
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Chinese Economy Will Continue to Roar Ahead
The Chinese economy continues to surprise the doubters. But given several macroeconomic headwinds - US economic slowdown, Chinese food price inflation, rising non-performing loans, stock market bubble - the article argues that they are actually a blessing in disguise. It looks like the Chinese economy is here to stay.

China's economy - How fit is the panda?
The Economist
Sep 27th 2007

NO COUNTRY in history has sustained such a blistering rate of growth over three decades as China. Its economy grew by a staggering 11.9% in the year to the second quarter. Since 1978 it has grown by an average of almost 10% a year—more than Japan or the Asian tigers achieved over similar periods when their economies took off. But eventually every sprinter trips. Japan's growth averaged 9.5% in the two decades to 1970, but slowed to 4.7% in the 1970s and to only 1% by the 1990s. (more...
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