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Topic: Fiscal Policy

Currency wars, noise and substance

The current debate about currency wars, the G20 meeting, QE2 (quantitative easing by the US Fed), it all makes for great Op-ed opportunities and commentary. One relevant question we prefer to focus on is that of asset pricing implications (preferably in the medium-term) and how to position our portfolios accordingly. This note is not a read more

Martin Anidjar | November 12, 2010

Brave new rebalancing(s)

We are at an interesting junction in the markets, with this non-trivial rally in front of significant uncertainties around the world: elections in the US next week as well as very relevant announcements expected from the Fed, while global rebalancing is being ‘designed’, the EU discussing major institutional reform and the developing world continues to read more

Martin Anidjar | October 28, 2010

Of exodus, discrepancies, and structural changes

The still incipient September market recovery appears to respond to data that negates the double-dip view and increases credence to the gradual recovery view. Our approach has been to cautiously position for the latter, within a broader theme of a structural change in favor of EM and other non-G7 countries. In other words, we continue read more

Martin Anidjar | September 23, 2010

Short-term jitters have not changed the view

The high volatility of the last few months has generated panic moments in the markets, perceived uncertainty about future scenarios, and sharp inconsistencies in some of the public policy debates. Though there are reasons to marginally re-shuffle the probability distribution among the most likely scenarios, there is no real reason to change the base-case scenario. read more

Martin Anidjar | July 21, 2010

The euro is the wrong barometer

When we wrote “The euro is naked” on February 11 we were certainly bearish, but did not expect the euro to dictate all markets behavior even at high frequency. Watching the markets these days, it is fairly clear that the FX rate EUR/USD has become the barometer for the success of the euro bailout. We read more

Martin Anidjar | May 18, 2010

Euro reform or German Spa?

A week ago we said that Europe would pay dearly any policy mistake, but we did not think it would be so much so soon… The size of the potential financial package known yesterday exceeds most expectations, which is the reason of its success. In terms of the ‘theory of crisis management’ it is a read more

Martin Anidjar | May 11, 2010

European policies favor the US

Markets appear to have already decided the recent package for Greece does not work and is not credible. It is not very rigorous to infer much from a couple of trading days, but the magnitude of the market movement together with the debate on the matter let us infer its failure. The package does not read more

Martin Anidjar | May 05, 2010

It starts with a G, but it’s not a bank

The SEC claim on Goldman Sachs is no longer an aggregate risk to the market. Greece still is. The news last Friday about the SEC claim on Goldman Sachs had an effect on markets across the board. Today we are all more aware of the issues, the grey areas and the most likely scenarios for read more

Martin Anidjar | April 22, 2010

The euro is naked. How about the dollar?

The fiscal crisis that started in Greece, and drove attention to similar problems in Portugal, Spain and Italy, is way more than a fiscal crisis. This is about the euro as a currency and about the EU as an institutional framework for governing a union, even more so now that there appears to be a read more

Martin Anidjar | February 11, 2010

Shocks that matter for the short-term

Over the last 10 days a sequence of shocks have shaken confidence on the recovery. Those shocks have more of an impact on sentiment than on the fundamentals that comprise our medium-term base-case scenario. But the market impact of those shocks has been significant, which is why a reassessment of that scenario is due. The read more

Martin Anidjar | January 28, 2010

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