Goldman Sachs energy analysts Arjun Murti on the equities side and Jeff Currie on commodities have just presented their thoughts ... [Link]
Each month the market focuses on the Employment Situation Report. At "A Dash" we have studied this carefully, perhaps more so ...
[Link]
The Treasury will sell $16 billion of 10 year notes in about an hour. It is a lot of risk and ...
[Link]
Many finger the ratings agencies for a portion of our current problems, and to be sure, they deserve blame. Many of ...
[Link]
Agencies, yes. But not Treasuries.
Keith Bradsher of the New York Times, citing Ben Simpfendorfer of RBS, argues that China’s ...
[Link]Larry Flynt and Ben Dover want the UK and US governments to bail out the porn industry. Now, I’m no ... [Link]
Is trading against the trend worth the risk? (MarketSci Blog)
What now for quants? (Market Movers)
The VIX was ...
[Link]
I have had the flu for the last 3 weeks, and now have bronchitis. But do not worry, I will be ...
[Link]
The FT says today that the government of Singapore's $23-a-share investment in Merrill Lynch was worth just $12.10 per share at ...
[Link]Voilà ce qu'il y a dans ma boule de cristal pour l'année qui commence.... [Link]
jck [at]
aleablog [dot] com
© 2008 Alea | Powered by Wordpress
December 5th, 2008 at 12:25 pm
Harvard kicks up the risk level a notch or two. Whom God would destroy, he often makes mad.
Perhaps a a better word for Bernanke, and Bush and Obama’s advisors, is Sophomoric. They’re bright guys, but they are thinking way too linearly about these economic problems, and their solutions, and blindly assuming that Bernanke/Friedman got it right regarding what went wrong in the Great Depression.
December 5th, 2008 at 8:31 pm
Fed: On the Great Moderation…
“if the Great Moderation was largely the result of good luck rather than a more stable economy or better policies, then we have no particular reason to expect the relatively benign economic environment of the past twenty years to continue.”
exactly.
December 6th, 2008 at 12:34 am
Exactly NOT the view supported by Bernanke, read further:
“If instead the Great Moderation was the result of structural change or improved policymaking, then the increase in stability should be more likely to persist, assuming of course that policymakers do not forget the lessons of history.
My view is that improvements in monetary policy, though certainly not the only factor, have probably been an important source of the Great Moderation. In particular, I am not convinced that the decline in macroeconomic volatility of the past two decades was primarily the result of good luck, as some have argued, though I am sure good luck had its part to play as well. In the remainder of my remarks, I will provide some support for the “improved-monetary-policy”