Leonard Mlodinow: The Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives (Vintage)Great insight for investors seeking to distinguish real indicators from random noise.
Kate Kelly: Street Fighters: The Last 72 Hours of Bear Stearns, the Toughest Firm on Wall StreetGood read, good info -- a building block for anyone trying to figure it out. What the heck happened!??
Michael Shermer: Why People Believe Weird Things: Pseudoscience, Superstition, and Other Confusions of Our Time
Graham T. Allison: Essence of Decision: Explaining the Cuban Missile Crisis (2nd Edition)A seminal work on decision-making.
Mancur Olson: The Logic of Collective Action: Public Goods and the Theory of Groups, Second printing with new preface and appendix (Harvard Economic Studies)
Andy Kessler: Wall Street Meat: My Narrow Escape from the Stock Market Grinder
Roger Lowenstein: When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long-Term Capital Management
Robert A. Caro: Master of the Senate: The Years of Lyndon Johnson, (Vintage)
Ken Uston: Million Dollar Blackjack
Edwin Lefèvre: Reminiscences of a Stock Operator (A Marketplace Book)
Neil Browne: Asking the Right Questions: A Guide to Critical Thinking (8th Edition)
Ralph Vince: Portfolio Management Formulas : Mathematical Trading Methods for the Futures, Options, and Stock Markets
Malcolm Gladwell: Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking
Brett N. Steenbarger: Enhancing Trader Performance: Proven Strategies From the Cutting Edge of Trading Psychology (Wiley Trading)
Robert J. Shiller: Irrational Exuberance
Gene Epstein: Econospinning: How to Read Between the Lines When the Media Manipulate the Numbers
Edward R. Tufte: The Visual Display of Quantitative InformationThe authoritative work on the subject.
Murray Edelman: The Symbolic Uses of Politics
Gary Belsky: Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes And How To Correct Them: Lessons From The New Science Of Behavioral Economics
« Weighing the Week Ahead: How Full is the Glass? | Main | Conspiracy Refuted »
Friday's employment situation report comes at a critical time for financial markets. The combined efforts of the bearish blogging network, the televised media (What are the chances of a "double dip, Mr. X?), and the technical community (If we close a couple of points below 1040, the next stop is 20% lower), have scared the daylights out of the average investor.
My guess is that Friday's employment report will make matters even worse. Meanwhile, there will be the usual blunders in interpretation.
Let me start with some background on my approach.
Our Own Estimate
Each month we ask the question, "What change in payroll employment would be consistent with other economic data from the same time period (the middle of the prior month)?
This is not a forecast, per se, since we do not posit any causal relationship among these variables. They are all concurrent indicators of economic activity.
Our long-term record has been very good, especially when compared to the final revised data. This makes sense because our model was derived from the final data. Our approach makes logical sense, because it involves some factors related to jobs lost, and some related to job creation.
Based upon the data, our estimate is a small gain of 6,000 jobs. This should be adjusted by whatever the BLS announces as the census effect, something that I cannot model.
Other Forecasts
It is always interesting to compare the job forecasts from different sources. We follow several because of the widely varying methods they use. A wise interpretation would be to consider all of these disparate sources of information.
All of us are dealing with unusual circumstances because of the census hiring and later layoffs. This is not something that fits nicely into a model. The various forecasts should all be interpreted within that framework.
ADP has proprietary data because of its payroll management business. Looking only at private sector jobs -- no government, no census effect, ADP sees a gain of only 13K jobs.
TrimTabs has another valuable approach -- tax deposits. Their forecast is a gain of 91,ooo private sector jobs. We then need to adjust for the government shifts. This is particularly noteworthy since TrimTabs has been (correctly) more bearish on job growth in recent months.
WANTED Technologies is no longer doing a public monthly forecast. This is a recognition of the economic realities. My preliminary data (yes, I know I promised a complete accounting) suggests that their innovative method was actually better than the monthly payroll report. They should be rewarded for good work. Instead, they do not find it profitable to publish their findings.
How can this be? The correct way to interpret jobs data is to look at the final result when we know what really happened, and then see who did best. No one actually does this. Instead of viewing the various research approaches as a mutual quest for The Truth, the market deems the BLS preliminary result to be "official."
To summarize briefly, the market wants a prediction of the BLS preliminary estimate -- including the 100K confidence interval, the seasonal adjustments, and the benchmark revisions. I am probably the strongest supporter of BLS methodology and integrity, but I still see their approach as only one method out of many.
In fact, I believe that the ADP weakened their approach by attempting to predict the BLS result instead of just reporting the facts. I am disappointed at the loss of the valuable Wanted Technologies approach.
If you really seek The Truth, using the final benchmarked change (as we do) then you may have wider deviations from the initial reports.
Investment Implications
This is an Alice in Wonderland world. From an economic perspective, nothing much has really happened in the past month. The employment situation, as reflected in our indicators, has been about the same for several months. It was not as bullish as some expected last month, and it will not be as bearish as people will report on Friday.
The political spin is a different matter. Many people just read the headline. With the loss of census jobs, the payroll report may have a negative print. How will the market react? Even though this is "old news" you have to expect a bearish reaction. There will also be the regular incorrect and negative twist on the birth/death adjustment.
As usual, the best way to trade the employment report is to be short going in.
A Deeper Understanding
Some typical errors can be expected.
The featured commentators will confuse job creation with net job creation. Why is this important? To pick just one reason, the number of actual jobs lost in the last year is on the order of 30 million. Many more people are touched by unemployment than the net numbers suggest. If you really want to understand employment, you need to start with actual data -- not forecasts. Look here.
The failure of the mainstream media and the economic blogosphere to report about employment dynamics is one of the biggest questions I have with the alleged strength of economic blogging.
The big-time bloggers and MSM blogging wannabees are all MIA when it comes to employment dynamics.
This is a key to understanding the negative sentiment. No on is getting this right.
UPDATE, Thursday Morning: The ISM report for June was only 56.2. While this is still consistent with strong economic growth, it is the only really positive element in our forecast. Using this lower number changes our model result to a loss of about 40K jobs, not including the census effect.
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