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Developed Countries

Long-after-the-fact revisions to reported income, spending and savings data do not alter our assessment that a flush consumer will continue to support the US economy and allow S&P 500 earnings to surprise the bearish investor consensus.

US Nonfarm payrolls rose by a slightly more-than-expected 263 thousand in September, from 315 thousand in August. In particular, the leisure & hospitality and healthcare sectors led the gains. Moreover, employment in the highly cyclical manufacturing…
  At 62.3%, the total labor force participation rate remains 1.1 ppt below where it stood before the pandemic began (see The Numbers). For the prime-age population (25-54 years old), the participation rate is 0.4 ppt short of its January 2020 level.…
  According to BCA Research’s Foreign Exchange Strategy service, cable has likely priced a lot of the bad news suggesting investors should buy on weakness. The pound has likely seen the lows for the next few years, near 1.035. This makes it a buy…
The volume of retail sales in the Eurozone fell by 2% y/y in August, marking the third consecutive month of decline and a steeper drop than July’s 1.2% contraction. Notably, it was a slight disappointment to expectations of -1.7% and all major retail sales…
Recent US data highlights that economic activity is deteriorating. The US Composite PMI remains in contraction territory for the third consecutive month in September. The Conference Board’s Leading Economic Index declined for the sixth consecutive month in…
According to BCA Research’s Counterpoint service achieving price stability will require a 20-25 percent decline in profits. Buried deep in the Federal Reserve’s latest Summary of Economic Projections (SEP) is its forecast that, to get back to 2 percent…

OPEC 2.0’s decision to cut 2mm b/d of output beginning in December telescopes the loss of Russian volumes we expect over the course of the coming year. OPEC 2.0 clearly is not playing by the G7’s or the US’s rules. This will keep prices volatile.

Investors should overweight US defense stocks in a world where US war-weariness is declining and the Biden administration is likely to exhibit an increasingly hawkish foreign policy.

The Fed says that to get back to 2 percent inflation, the US unemployment rate must increase by ‘just’ 0.6 percent through 2023-24. All well and good you might think, except that the Fed is forecasting something that has been unachievable for at least 75 years! Is the Fed gaslighting us? And what does it mean for investment strategy?