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I love this one. On Thursday, the WSJ reported that John Meriwether, the wonderful guy who brought us the Long Term Capital Management fiasco in 1998 that almost brought the international financial system down, is at it again. His current hedge fund (who would give this guy money to manage?) is sinking and, he is "placating investors" by telling them his management team "will use their experience to survive this crisis." And why exactly would that make me feel better?
The Federal Reserve's favorite inflation measure continues to behave. The Personal Consumption Deflator increased a modest .1%, as did the "core" rate. The year-over-year increase in the headline rate is still an uncomfortable (but only uncomfortable) +3.4%, while the year-over-year core rate is +2%, in line with the Fed's goals. One key metric is showing signs of improvement. The difference between the 10-year Treasury bond and the 30-year fixed mortgage rate is looked upon as a sign of liquidity, or lack thereof, in the system. This spread is usually about 1.5%, or 150 basis points. So, if the 10-year bond was at a 3.5% yield, normally you would expect the 30-year fixed to be 3.5+1.5, or 5%. Lately, because of the credit crisis, the spread widened to almost 3%. The widest difference I saw reported was actually 292 basis points. That is an indication of an unwillingness to lend. The spread has improved in line with the Fed's recent aggressive actions to stimulate the economy. The spread on Thursday was 222 basis points, or 2.2% vs. the above mentioned norm of 1.5%. Not back to normal, but moving in the right direction.
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Vincent Farrell Jr. is a principal of Scotsman Capital Management. Prior to joining Scotsman in April 2005, Farrell was chairman of Victory Capital Management of Cleveland and chairman of Victory SBSF Capital Management in New York. He was a founding partner of Spears Benzak Salomon & Farrell, which was acquired by KeyCorp in 1995. Vince held a variety of positions in his 23 years at SBSF, including chief investment officer, and he served as the portfolio manager on a number of the firm's largest client relationships. He is a regular guest on CNBC as well as other national print and broadcast media. Prior to joining SBSF, Vince spent nine years at Smith Barney as a vice president, sales. Vince graduated from Princeton University in 1969 and received his MBA from the Iona College Graduate School of Business in 1972.
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