The Remarkable Resilience of Corporate Margins

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Last Wednesday, the University of Michigan released its final reading on consumer sentiment for November, with the index coming in at 61.3, up from its flash reading but down from October and worse than 92% of monthly sentiment readings since 1978. Meanwhile, the “misery index” for October, calculated as the sum of the unemployment rate and the year-over-year CPI inflation rate, came in at 7.1%, better (or that is to say, lower) that it has been 79% of the time over the same period. We continue to have a bottom decile attitude about a top quartile economy.
This general gloom may account for part of the recent buildup in retail money-market funds which have risen by almost 50% over the past year to over $2.2 trillion. While some of this is the result of outflows from bank deposits, much of it represents long-term savings that investors are unwilling to commit to long-term investments.

The Remarkable Resilience of Corporate Margins

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The Remarkable Resilience of Corporate Margins
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