Wednesday, November 29, 2017

Forbes: Why Lowering Corporate Rate Is Crucial And Misrepresented

By SIMON CONSTABLE
This morning I had the privilege to be a guest on Joe Piscopo's Radio Show in New York City. He was, of course, delightful.
One pertinent topic he asked about was the tax reform bill which is winding its way through Congress. The answer is worth repeating because the role of tax rates in business often gets misrepresented. Read more here.

Joe Piscopo Show: The Tax Cuts Matter

By SIMON CONSTABLE


Forbes: Worrying Data Raises Recession Fears

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Just when you thought the economy looked solid, up pops a worrying statistic.
The growth of commercial and industrial loans has fallen precipitously this year. Read more here.

Tuesday, November 28, 2017

U.S. News: Why U.S. Stocks Will Beat Europe and China in 2018

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Next year looks set to be a good one for U.S. stocks, which are expected to plow far ahead of those in other key regions in the world, analysts say. 


The forecast for the U.S. economy, which is by far the largest in the world, is solid with GDP growth expected to average 2.5 percent over 2018, according to a recent report from Goldman Sachs. If the projection comes true it will be double the 1.2 percent rate reached during 2016's second quarter, according to data from the St. Louis Federal Reserve. Read more here.

John Batchelor Show: Swamp Creatures Outperform The Market

By SIMON CONSTABLE


Photo by Max Harlynking on Unsplash

Saturday, November 25, 2017

Barron's: A Cold December Could Heat Up Wheat Prices

By SIMON CONSTABLE

A BRUTAL COLD SNAP IN DECEMBER IS LIKELY, ACCORDING TO SOME FORECASTERS, and it could lift winter wheat prices higher than $5 a bushel, up more than a dollar from recent prices. A rally would aid the much-beleaguered farm economy, which has been hurt by steadily falling wheat prices since mid-2012. Read more here.

Photo by rajeev ramdas on Unsplash

Friday, November 24, 2017

P+I: ETFs offer plethora of risk management alternatives

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Some of the biggest exchange-traded funds now have bid-ask spreads lower than the underlying securities they hold.

There are multiple reasons, but a significant part of the answer is that these investment vehicles offer a more favorable investing alternative for the institutions that buy and sell them. Read more here.

Photo by Joshua Mayo on Unsplash