Thursday, March 15, 2012

The Greg and Mike Show

Greg Smith's very public resignation from Goldman Sachs, via an op ed piece in the New York Times, has everyone talking while Goldman does double duty in damage control.

I interviewed Mike Mayo for the Financial Times to get his take (he wrote Exile on Wall Street, a 20-year account of the abuses he witnessed).

His comments are still spot on.

Here is the link to the Financial Times piece:   

http://ftalphaville.ft.com/blog/2012/03/15/925871/mayo-on-greg-smith-and-the-abcs-of-change/


Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Data Dive

My mother named me Merry  because she wanted me to be happy - and I am.  But not with the retail sales number released yesterday.  We're all eager to see legs under the economic recovery, and none more than me.  But when the market runs up and closes at its highest since the Great Recession began, partly because retail sales are up, looking at the data behind it gives me pause, as it should you, too.

Retail sales were up from a revised 0.6% to 1.1%.  Sounds great.  But, that includes higher prices for gasoline, and no one with a pulse thinks higher gas prices are cause for celebration.  Gasoline sales were up a full 3.3%, clothing and building materials were up 1.8% and 1.4%, respectively.

A strong increase in clothing and building materials bodes well for a strengthening economy.  Although I hate to be perceived as a modern-day Cassandra, furniture sales were down -1.2%, and general merchandise was down -0.1%.  These last two data points don't inspire confidence that we're out of the woods.  Coupled with rocketing gas prices and a still crippled employment market, things may not be as rosy as they seem.

I'll be the first to herald a strong economy - we're long overdue. But until real unemployment drops significantly, I'm less than sanguine.