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Policy

Highlights The simple relationship between the unemployment rate and inflation, the traditional Phillips Curve, is not especially strong. But this perspective is archaic and ignores the lessons learned by central bankers during the 1960s and 1970s.…

In Section I, we respond to the ongoing challenge to our view that the US economy is on a recessionary path. The available evidence overwhelmingly supports the notion that US monetary policy is tight, which argues against the “no landing” economic scenario. It also underscores that the recessionary clock is indeed ticking unless the monetary policy stance eases soon. The “soft landing” narrative remains improbable and may have been unduly boosted by artificially low inflation readings over the summer. Until concrete signs of the meaningful rate cuts emerge, we will continue to recommend that investors maintain defensive portfolio positions. In Section II, we review the “modern-day” Phillips Curve, and explain why it is unlikely that the Fed will see a sustainable return to its 2% target without a rise in the unemployment rate above NAIRU.

The Fed and ECB talked a good game as they redoubled their commitments to returning core inflation to 2% p.a. at Jackson Hole. However, their outmoded inflation-fighting playbooks do not address supply tightness in commodity and energy markets, which keeps inflation risk elevated. The proposed expansion of the BRICS states seeks to capitalize on these trends, and supports efforts to weaken the centrality of the USD in global trade. We remain long commodity exposure via ETFs to retain exposure to energy and metals producers and refiners.

Will The ECB Hike Again…
US LEI: Signal Or Noise…

We comment on Jay Powell’s Jackson Hole speech and recommend shifting to a barbelled allocation along the Treasury curve.

US And China Agree To Hold Semiannual Trade Dialogue…

Investors should underweight global equities and risk assets; overweight US stocks relative to global; and overweight defensive sectors versus cyclicals.

Shrinking M3 Money Supply Indicates ECB Policy Is Tight…

Today’s Strategy Report chartbook presents the data underpinning our view that both inflation and growth are slowing, likely pointing to a recession beginning sometime in the first half of next year. We are tactically equal weight across asset classes after being stopped out of our equity overweight on August 17th and expect our next move will be to underweight equities and overweight fixed income, in line with our twelve-month view.