This morning's release of December factory orders confirms Powell's commentary. Here's from Econoday's summary: emphasis mine...
"A glaring weakness in December and November orders are sharp 1.0 percent and 1.1 percent declines for core capital goods orders (nondefense ex-aircraft). This is telling evidence that business investment is down which in turn may well betray a downturn in business confidence. And there's an important revision in today's report that will be trimming back estimates for nonresidential investment in tomorrow's fourth-quarter GDP report as December shipments for this series, initially at a 0.5 percent gain in last week's advance report, are now revised to no change. November stands at a 0.2 percent decrease for core shipments."As I've preached here from the get-go, I can think of virtually nothing more economically pernicious than policy that would disrupt global trade relations.
I -- as I've been preaching of late -- believe we're nearing a critical juncture; i.e., it's critical for the health of the economy and for the markets going forward that a trade agreement be reached relatively soon with China, and that a similar skirmish is not provoked with Europe immediately thereafter...
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