EVENTS:   Acceleration in the Energy Transition - David Scott/CHA-AM Advisors - 12 May 26     ROADSHOWS: Consumer Research & Industry Trends focused on US Retail, E-Tail, and Consumer Products Companies - Scott Mushkin /R5 Capital   •   London   07 - 08 May 26       US Equity Short Research & Strategy - Zach Shannon /Corto Capital Advisors   •   New York   18 - 19 May 26       Investing in Constraint: Governance, Scarcity, and the Next Phase of the Energy Transition - François Boutin-Dufresne & Félix-A. Boudreault & Lenka Martinek /Sustainable Market Strategies   •   London   18 - 19 May 26      

Unstable Equilibrium - The Path from 9 to 3, now what?

Ironsides Macroeconomics

Wed 16 Aug 2023 - 15:00 BST / 10:00 EDT

Summary

Barry outlined his bullish outlook for the economy and markets as being grounded in three key factors: a disinflationary trend, the resilience of earnings, and a favourable liquidity environment. Past inflationary recessions have also resulted in milder earnings reductions with the preservation of nominal growth amid real growth contractions. He then delved into liquidity dynamics, examining the impacts of Treasury Secretary Yellen's liquidity injections into the banking system. Analysing inflation dynamics, Barry challenged the so-called "great resignation", attributing wage growth to labour market turnover. With a keen eye on the yield curve, Barry discussed the possibility of a bear steepener yield curve. Barry outlined his sector allocation viewpoints on tech, banks, cyclicals, energy, and defensive sectors, cautioning against an excessive reliance on tech due to its substantial index weight and concluded by expounding on the logic steering sectoral allocations.

Topics

The end of the GDI recession : Earnings and economic activity

Disinflation had little to do with monetary policy: Suboptimal policy tightening

An unstable equilibrium: All curve inversions are not the same