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Why The Founder Of A $35 Billion Hedge Fund Is "Very Worried"

Why The Founder Of A $35 Billion Hedge Fund Is "Very Worried"

David Siegel is worried, very worried as a matter of fact. The co-founder of Two Sigma, the $35 billion hedge fund said at the Milken Institute Global Conference that he's "very worried" that machines could soon replace a large amount of the workforce.

"Most people in the bulk of the job market are not involved in super-high-value jobs. They are doing routine work and tasks and it's precisely these tasks that computers are going to be better at doing" Siegel said.

Pimco Global Economic Advisor Suggests QE Should Buy Equities Next

Speaking at a panel in the Milken conference titled "Monetary Policy: Out Of Ammunition" moments ago Pimco's global economic advisor Joachim Fels, formerly of Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, had a few observations on QE vs NIRP, not surprisingly nudging central banks that explicitly central bank buying, i.e., QE, is far more powerful than the implicit deflationary signal which is NIRP.

  • FELS: QE IS A MORE POWERFUL TOOL THAN NEGATIVE RATES

He then proceeded to point out the obvious;

"We Expect A Sizeable Sell-Off" - One Hedge Fund's Four Mega-Bearish Trades

From our friends at Fasanara Capital we get their latest contrarian - and very bearish - Investment Outlook, which can be summarized as follows: "Reflation Phase To Be Temporary, More Downside Ahead", and which also contains four key conviction trade ideas over the next 12 months.

This is what fund manager Francesco Filia cautions about the market over the next year:

Ken Rogoff's Shockingly Simple Advice To Emerging Markets: Hoard Gold

Authored by Kenneth Rogoff, originally posted at Project Syndicate,

Are emerging-market central banks overweight in dollars and underweight in gold? Given a slowing global economy, in which emerging markets are probably very grateful for any reserves they retain, this might seem an ill-timed question. But there is a good case to be made that a shift in emerging markets toward accumulating gold would help the international financial system function more smoothly and benefit everyone.

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