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Citi Chief Economist Fears "Financial Froth" But Thinks "Fed Tightening Is No Big Deal"

Citi Chief Economist Fears "Financial Froth" But Thinks "Fed Tightening Is No Big Deal"

Authored by Valentin Schmid via The Epoch Times,

There are few entertaining economists, and fewer still work on Wall Street. Willem Buiter, the chief economist of Citigroup, is one of them. He is not only entertaining, but also outspoken—and his analysis of key economic trends and themes is second to none.

The Epoch Times spoke with Buiter about Federal Reserve (Fed) interest rate policy and the surprising strength of the euro, as well as the impossibility of a Chinese soft landing.

Key Events In The Coming Week: Fed Minutes, Retail Sales And, Of Course, Politics

Key Events In The Coming Week: Fed Minutes, Retail Sales And, Of Course, Politics

In what should be a relatively quiet, mid-summer week if only on the global economic schedule even as domestic and global political tensions continue to set the general risk tone on any given day, the focus over the next few days will be on US retail sales on Tuesday and Industria Production on Thursday, as well as on monetary meeting minutes from the Fed and the ECB. Here, focus is on the inflation outlook and discussion of transitory vs persistent factors.

Frontrunning: August 14

  • Korea tensions ease slightly as U.S. officials play down war risks (Reuters)
  • Pence Plays Down Trump Threat on Venezuela (WSJ)
  • Trump Pressed to Reject White Nationalist Groups (WSJ)
  • White House Says Trump Abhors Neo-Nazis (BBG)
  • Charlottesville, and the World, Take Stock of Violent Episode (NYT)
  • Car Attack Suspect Had Shown Troubling Behavior (NYT)
  • U.S. Default? Unlikely, But Bond Traders Are Taking No Chances (BBG)
  • Voters sense betrayal in Britain's Brexit heartlands (Reuters)

China Slams Trump's "Trade War" Announcement, Says It Is A Distraction From "Domestic Turmoil" In The U.S.

China Slams Trump's "Trade War" Announcement, Says It Is A Distraction From "Domestic Turmoil" In The U.S.

Today at 3pm, President Trump will sign a memo addressing “China’s laws, policies, practices, and actions related to intellectual property, innovation, and technology” effectively launching the first shot in what many predict will blossom into an all-out trade war with China. As discussed over the weekend, administration officials said Saturday that memo will direct U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer to consider investigating China over its IP policies, especially the practice of forcing U.S. companies operating in China to transfer technological know-how.

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