Faded as the day goes on. Every sector in europe is in positive territory. Are seeing luxury stocks doing well. The mining stocks are doing well. The euro is softer. We have some disappointing data coming out of the manufacturing sector, particularly out of germany. Take a look at the relationship between the german twoyear and the u. S. To year. , take a looknyear at what is happening here. Yields are lower. Prices are little higher. Vonnie lets get to the economy and the markets. We are joined by Deutsche Bank securities chief. Not aly shy but that is bad reading, is it . It had been below 50 for a little while. War. D to do with the trade that is actually really good news. We are torn between the uncertainty from the trade war. Have seen indicators that spending,f cap and the number we got is confirming that there is some rebound going on. That has been weighing on the outlook for a little while. Had significant easing. As long as these uncertainties dont spiral out of control and w
Which is crucial for canada. Lets check on the broader markets here in the u. S. For the s p 500, continue to reach above 3000, but just a bit of weakness before the rates decision. The u. S. Dollar index not really moving. We are at 97 92 cents, fairly healthy. Off. 0 year yield on general electric, investors reacting well to this numbers to these numbers. It looks like larry culp is actually delivering. Guy cash flow very solid. Flows off today. It is the banks really doing the damage, mainly Deutsche Bank, Credit Suisse, santander, all down hard today. That is what is dragging the stoxx 600 away from the 400 line. Eurosterling a little negative right now. Tiering comes into place today for European Banks, plus the restart of that qe program. We are keeping a firm i on both of those stories. The others dry want to mention is the South African rand, absolutely pummeled. The dollar up by 2. 5 . The budget out in cape town today, having a few having a huge impact on the rand today. Vonn
So, in thinking about this event and in what we wanted to accomplish here, what we set out to do was to have Larry Summers make the case why we should think about this, have a number of very experienced monetary economists who have views about what we should do, think about what we should do. In this panel, the question was, could we get some people to some very different points of view, to talk about, what difference does this really make . Is this worth the energy we spend on it and to whom does it matter . So we have a deliberately diverse panel. John taylor from stanford, wellknown for his taylor rule, thinking about Monetary Policy for a long time. Christian forbes from mit, until recently on the Monetary Policy committee of the bank of england, correct me if i am wrong, you never had a chance to raise rates, is that right . Right. You tried. Peter hooper chief economist of Deutsche Bank securities and writing about the relationship between the fed and the congress only briefly me
What we should do. In this panel, the question was, could we get some people to some very different points of view, to talk about, what difference does this really make . Is this worth the energy we spend on it and to whom does it matter . So we have a deliberately diverse panel. John taylor from stanford, wellknown for his taylor rule, thinking about Monetary Policy for a long time. Christian forbes from mit, until recently on the Monetary Policy committee of the bank of england, correct me if i am wrong, you never had a chance to raise rates, is that right . Right. You tried. Peter hooper chief economist of Deutsche Bank securities and writing about the relationship between the fed and the congress only briefly mention this morning but is relevant given after the Federal Reserve exists because congress created it. As we know legs, what congress created it can take away, sarah and her colleague have a book out called the myth of independence tracing the history to congress. I will ask
By the Brookings Institution center on fiscal and Monetary Policy, an hour and 45 minutes. So, in thinking about this event and in what we wanted to accomplish here, what we set out to do was to have Larry Summers make the case why we should think about this, have a number of very experienced monetary economists who have views about what we should do, think about what we should do. In this panel, the question was, could we get some people to some very different points of view, to talk about, what difference does this really make . Is this worth the energy we spend on it and to whom does it matter . So we have a deliberately diverse panel. John taylor from stanford, wellknown for his taylor rule, thinking about Monetary Policy for a long time. Christian forbes from mit, until recently on the Monetary Policy committee of the bank of england, correct me if i am wrong, you never had a chance to raise rates, is that right . Right. You tried. Peter hooper chief economist of Deutsche Bank sec