Saturday, November 4, 2017

What’s going on at Britain’s central bank?


It seems to be big news that Britain’s economy grew just 0.5% for its latest quarterly rate. I guess economic growth is all relative and this does show an improvement from economic growth of 0.4% for the previous quarter.  But it’s a very small jump.

This seemed to make the news more because that economy’s central bank (Bank of England) just raised the key interest rate in the past week. The Bank of England raised its key lending rate from 0.25% to 0.5%--also a very small hike. Although the Bank of England’s decision to the raise rate was not a surprise, it was big news in itself because this is the first time in about a decade that Britain’s key interest rate was raised. It seems that British policy makers are looking to this small jump in the economic growth rate as validating their decision to raise the key interest rate when they did. They are on the defensive from criticism that this decision to raise rates and tighten monetary policy was taken too early with Britain’s economy not doing as well as it could. They explained the decision to raise the rate as a response to signs that prices are starting to rise in Britain (so a way to fight inflation if it is starting to increase). But people in the know can tell that the real reason was to give the British economic policy makers some space to lower rates again if they have to—if the economic growth real does fall back sharply. This seems ironic to me and not good judgment in economic policy making – like playing games with an entire economy.

Britain has been having a more difficult time politically and economically than some other European countries since the British people voted last year to leave the European Union (Brexit vote). This has caused their currency, the pound to fall. It also caused business confidence to drop including because of the uncertainty about whether foreign firms would keep their main European offices in Britain and what this would do to England’s reputation as a major international financial center.

So now the British economy may at least be benefiting from the drop in the pound after the Brexit vote. This has made British exports relatively cheaper than the goods and services from the countries with currencies the pound has fallen in value against – including the euro. In fact, the data just in shows that Britain’s services sector in particular grew at a faster rate than the services sectors in the Eurozone countries.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-britain-economy-pmi/uk-economy-peps-up-bolstering-boe-rate-hike-call-pmi-idUKKBN1D30SO
 https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/02/business/britain-economy-rates.html

Thursday, November 2, 2017

New head of federal reserve will not be an economist

Today President Trump named Jerome Powell as the new head of the Federal Reserve when Janet Yellen leaves soon -- in February next year. This was surprising in one way - Powell is not a trained economist with a PhD but rather a trained lawyer and he has been on the Federal Reserve board and has tended to agree with the decisions of Janet Yellen. So as  a result Powell is expected to continue gradually raising interest rates but is not expected to do anything really unsurprising in his new role. Since 2009, Yellen has raised interest rates four times and is expected to raise rates again in December. Trump has been known to criticize Janet Yellen for keeping monetary policy too loose in the past. The main concern many people have with having Powell as the new head of the Fed is that he will liberalize US financial market regulations too much. The dollar fell slightly after the announcement and the stock market didn't react too much to the news, which was no longer a surprise at the time of announcement. Market watchers will continue to play close attention to what Powell does in the new job: reports have indicated that this is a very difficult place for economic policymakers to be because the US must transition the economy to a "more normal monetary policy."

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-11-01/trump-is-said-to-select-powell-as-fed-chairman-replacing-yellen
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/02/business/economy/jerome-powell-federal-reserve-trump.html
https://www.cnbc.com/2017/11/02/trump-picks-jerome-powell-to-succeed-yellen-as-fed-chair.html

Tax Reform News

The tax reform bill has been revealed and it calls for some things to stay, minor changes, and major changes. Here is a summary of some important changes that will affect many people.

The new bill keeps 401(k) contributions although they debated slashing the allowed amount from $18,000 pretax to 2,400. Another highly debated deduction was State and Local Taxes (SALT), these will also be kept, although they are getting rid of the sales tax deduction. Corporate Tax rate will be lowered from 35 to 20%. The last major change is the number of tax brackets, from 7 to 3-4.

There is talk of getting rid of the personal/dependency exemption of $4,050 and increasing the standard exemption (thought to be doubled).

Those are just some of the changes discussed in the Fox article. But the affects are what people are worried about. Getting rid of certain deductions will increase taxable income, and the goal is that the increased standard deduction will cover that. The 3-4 tax brackets are supposed to put more money in households pockets and allow them to consume maybe a fraction more and help stimulate the economy. Lastly, decreasing the corporate tax rate will hopefully bring more business to the United States. Companies may be more likely to do more business in the US since their tax liability would decrease, which could offset the decrease in tax rate.

It seems to be that the overall plan is to increase money into taxpayers and companies pockets, maybe to focus on economic growth, which could bring inflation. This proposed plan could be altered even more, so we will see what the effects will be. Considering the talk of tax reform has been prevalent since the primaries.



http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2017/11/02/tax-reform-bill-revealed-by-house-gop-heres-what-it-does.html

Tuesday, October 31, 2017

Why is the Canadian economy’s growth slowing lately?


In late October, Canadians were surprised to learn the news that their economy shrunk last month by 0.1% according to national data. This mining, quarrying and oil and gas sector and manufacturing slipped back by around 1%. This was tied to lower prices of these goods dropped. This came after ten months of economic growth in Canada, surprising Canadians who expected the economic recovery to continue. This announcement of a growth slowdown or even contraction possibly continuing caused the Canadian dollar to fall in value by 0.6% against the US dollar. But because the economy grew strongly in the first half of the year, many economists predict that growth for the year will still reach 3%.  The growth that Canada enjoyed in the first half of the year was considered due partly to rising international trade revenues. Since May however, Canada’s exports have been decreasing.

In addition, higher government spending including on an enhanced child benefit--which is a tax-free monthly payment by the government to eligible families to help them with the cost of raising children – helped stimulate consumption growth. A future risk that looms on the horizon for Canada however is that the North American Free Trade Agreement will be cancelled by the US under Trump.

  https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-10-31/canada-s-economy-unexpectedly-shrinks-in-august-key-takeaways
http://www.reuters.com/article/canada-economy/wrapup-1-canadian-economy-slows-reinforcing-central-bank-caution-idUSL2N1N51FL

US Consumer Spending Posts Largest Gain since 2009



Consumer spending in the United States accounts for over 2/3 of all economic activity in our country and we just recorded our biggest increase in over 8 years, with a jump of 1.0%. This in crease is largely due households in Texas and Florida, where they are dealing with the aftermath of two hurricanes, replacing flood-damaged vehicles. This was the largest increase since August 2009.

            This consumption was offset by a rise in inventory investment, business spending on equipment and a increase in our trade balance due to a drop in imports. This caused the economy to grow at a 3.0% rate in the third quarter which is a 0.1% decrease compared to the second quarter. The Commerce Department contributes this to the effects of Hurricane Harvey and Irma but said it “could not quantify the total impact of the storms on consumer spending and personal income.”

            It is also worth noting that during this period where consumption has increased at an 8 year high, personal income also increased by 0.4%.






https://www.cnbc.com/2017/10/30/us-personal-income-sept-2017.html

Drone vs. Shark

Australia’s waters are home to some dangerous creatures: jellyfish, salt-water crocodiles, and Great White sharks.  “Unprovoked” shark attacks more than doubled between 1990-2000 and 2005-2015, to 15.  However, one company in Western Australia has a futuristic solution: a drone. 
Shark Alert International will try equipping a helicopter and a drone with military-grade cameras that can “x-ray” the water and then send alerts to lifeguards and even surfers’ watches.  The technology was originally designed to help America detect a different foe: Russian submarines.  The drone will see deep into the water by taking images at several different frequencies every second.  Tests in California found that it could spot dummy sharks 15 feet beneath the surface with total accuracy, but could work at twice that depth in Perth’s sandy seas.
Helicopters and low-flying planes have long patrolled popular beaches, but human spotters are expensive and often ineffectual since not all sharks swim near the surface.  In addition, choppy waters and bright reflections make sharks difficult to spot when they do.  Drones can hover over beaches constantly, have already been tested in some parts of the country, and are even cheaper.  This summer the drones will feed live videos through a system that is taught how to differentiate sharks from surfers and boats with far greater accuracy than the human eye.  Messages can then be relayed to lifeguards and emergency services, while megaphones attached to the drones blast out warnings when a dangerous species is spotted.  I think it will be interesting to see how the drones can impact the number of tourists that come to the beaches to swim or surf.  In addition, I am curious to see if shark tour companies will use this product to quickly find sharks, and possibly raise prices if they can show off many different sharks on each tour.


Monday, October 30, 2017

JP Morgan developing blockchain payment system

Link
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-jpmorgan-blockchain/jpmorgan-launches-payments-network-using-blockchain-technology-idUSKBN1CL1P6

With the recent news of JP Morgan's new Interbank Information Network, supported by Quorum, JP Morgan Chase becomes the first US bank to integrate the use of blockchain technology in payment methods. Under a time of high scrutiny from bank executives, including JP Morgan's own CEO, Jamie Dimon, JP Morgan has started the forefront of a new world of the way think of electronic payments.

The blockchain is a technology developed by Satoshi Nakamoto, the creator of Bitcoin. Blockchain involves a payment method that relies on proof-of-transaction that is satisfied within the blockchain. Each payment must be verified under each block, creating a public, and open thread in which all transactions may be seen and traced. This new technology has been heralded by some to be the greatest innovation since the airplane. Many foreign banks have already hopped on the blockchain train, including the Royal Bank of Canada and the Australia and New Zealand Banking Group.

With the lead of JP Morgan, hopefully many more US banks will join in on this new, innovative way or peer-to-peer electronic payments. In a time of leading innovation across the board, banks are one area that have seen a lack of innovation in recent years. For those who think our financial systems must be updated, this is a great step forward.



https://www.cbsnews.com/news/jeff-bezos-worlds-richest-man-after-amazon-stock-surges/
Tech giants Amazon and Google's parent Alphabet have posted a surge in sales over the last three months. Shares in Alphabet jumped above $1,000 in after-hours trading after the company reported sales up 24% to $27.8bn. Amazon, the world's biggest e-commerce site, saw sales rise 34% to $43.7bn - nearly the size of Slovenia's economy last year. Meanwhile, Microsoft's profit beat estimates on gains from cloud services. Alphabet's profits for the three months to 30 September rose to $7.8bn, from $5.6bn for the same quarter last year. Analysis: Tech results bring sweet Valley highs The company's chief financial officer, Ruth Porat, said the firm was delighted with the way it was performing. "We had a terrific quarter, with revenues up 24% year on year, reflecting strength across Google and Other Bets," she said. "Our momentum is a result of investments over many years in fantastic people, products and partnerships." Google continues to make up the vast majority of Alphabet's revenue and income. However the so-called Other Bets unit, which includes the Waymo driverless car business and the Project Loon WiFi-enabled weather balloon venture, saw revenue increase and losses fall. Total Other Bets revenue was up to $302m, from $197m last year. YouTube continued to see "phenomenal growth", said Google chief executive Sundar Pichai in a conference call, with more than 1.5 billion people spending an average of an hour a day watching videos there on mobile devices, and surging use on television screens in homes. Amazon Despite Amazon's sales growth, the firm's profits were nearly flat as it ploughed money into tech gadgets, streaming video, data centres and warehouses to support its growing empire. The firm said profits in the three months to the end of September were $256m, up from $252m in 2016. Shares surged in after-hours trade anyway, as investors, who had been expecting a smaller number after being warned to expect the reinvestment, cheered the firm's growth prospects. Chief executive Jeff Bezos said the Amazon sales increase was in part down to the growing demand for the firm's smart home products, which are powered by artificially intelligent assistant, Alexa. "In the last month alone, we've launched five new Alexa-enabled devices, introduced Alexa in India, announced integration with BMW, surpassed 25,000 skills, integrated Alexa with Sonos speakers, taught Alexa to distinguish between two voices, and more," Mr Bezos said. Upmarket grocer Whole Foods, which Amazon acquired in August, brought in $1.3bn in sales in the quarter. Excluding Whole Foods, sales increased 29%, Amazon said. Sales were up 35% overall in North America, which accounts for the bulk of Amazon's business. They increased 29% in its international division thanks in part to a Prime Day surge, but the unit is still running at an operating loss. The firm also said it now has nearly 542,000 full and part-time staff, including workers from Whole Foods. It continues to look at ways to expand its physical stores as well. Microsoft Microsoft said it earned revenue of $24.5bn in the three months to end-September, up 12% year-on-year. The firm's profits were $6.6bn, rising 16%. Microsoft shares rose 3.1% after-hours to a record $81.2. Microsoft said growth was driven in part by its cloud computing products, which it has focused on in a bid to be less reliant on computer sales and older software. Amy Hood, executive vice-president and chief financial officer at Microsoft, called it a "strong start" to the year. The firm reported $6.9bn in revenue from its intelligent cloud unit, up 14% year-on-year. Its productivity and business processes division, which includes sales from Office 365, reported $8.2bn in revenue, up 28%. A fourth tech company, Intel, also posted a jump in revenues and profit. The world's largest computer chip maker said revenue rose 2% during the quarter to $16.1bn, with net income up 34% to $4.52bn.

US weekly jobless claims total 233,000, vs 235,000 claims expected

US weekly jobless claims total 233,000, vs 235,000 claims expected

The number of American citizens who filed for unemployment benefits increased less than what was expected last week, which suggests that the labor market continued to tighten after Hurricane Harvey. The goods trade deficit also widened in September as an increase in exports was overshadowed by a jump in imports. The strength of the labor market, however, supports the view that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates come December. The Labor Department recently made initial claims that state unemployment benefits would increase by 10,000 to a total of 233,000 claims. The number of claims fell, however, to 223,000, which is the lowest level since March of 1973. The fact that despite the multiple hurricanes the number of claims made for unemployment benefits has lowered demonstrates the good standing of the current unemployment rate and economy as a whole. The impact of both Harvey and Irma has largely dropped out as the cause behind many of these claims in the continental United States, however, as the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico continue to be damaged by Irma and Maria, the infrastructure will continue to collapse and keep the islands isolated from the remainder of the country.