Unemployment is rising in San Francisco despite the low national rate and we’re seeing a growing divergence between high yield and investment grade bond performance—both phenomena the Fed should keep its eye on—but the big news today is President Trump’s 2:45 pm meeting with China’s Vice Premier Liu He on trade. Hopes appear high for progress, or at least a tentative truce, as Trump says the first round of meetings yesterday went “very well” and reports came out of a potential “mini-deal.” This would come as a relief as the two nations’ Manufacturing PMI readings are diverging significantly, with the U.S. sinking deeper into contraction while growth reignites in China. Manufacturing and industrial production are also down in Britain—where Brexit uncertainty and the 10/31 negotiations deadline is weighing heavily on the economy—and Germany’s PMI has sunk so far below the global figure that’s it set a new record. Could positive news from today’s trade meeting revitalize these increasingly anemic economies?
1. The FOMC will be watching this closely…
Source: Merk Investments, as of 9/30/19
2. Is the recent weakness in high yield bonds relative to IG bonds an early warning sign?
Source: Scotia Capital, as of 10/11/19
3. Another new U.S. oil production record.
Source: WSJ Daily Shot, as of 10/11/19
4. …and we are now producing more energy that we use… true independence!
Source: WSJ Daily Shot, as of 10/11/19
5. Will a BREXIT deal and a trade deal happen at the same time? Even so, there is work to be done beyond a truce…
Source: WSJ Daily Shot, as of 10/11/19
6. Germany could use the dual deal for sure…
Source: Pantheon Macroeconomics, as of 10/11/19
7. While it is next to impossible to “win” a trade war, it appears that China’s manufacturing sector is holding up much better than here at home. Will this give China more leverage?
Source: Alpine Macro, as of 10/10/19
8. Yet there are visible signs of duress in China as well…
Source: Bloomberg, as of 10/8/19
9. With these types of numbers, how can the WTO categorize China as an Emerging economy?!
Source: WSJ Daily Shot, as of 10/10/19
10. Who really benefits from hedge funds in general? Perhaps the 1.5% fee + 20% of the gains gives a clue…
Source: The Wall Street Journal, as of 10/6/19
11. And a great example of competition versus a monopoly:
Source: WSJ Daily Shot, as of 10/11/19