When 2014 started, expectations were sky high and as Saxo Bank’s Chief Economist Steen Jakobsen notes, policymakers and their support organisations like the OECD, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank were all quick to call the crisis over and project a true recovery. Now just five month into the year we have seen nothing but disappointing data both relatively speaking but certainly also in absolute terms. As the following presentation outlines, Jakobsen believes we will see new low yields in this cycle this year and that 2014 will also be the year of the low in terms of: inflation expectations, wage/salary, velocity of money, loan demand, lack of reform, and innovation reforms.
As Jakobsen notes,
our projections are starting to pan out: Germany is slowing down as a consequence of Asian rebalancing, which is a derivative of the fact that the US is no longer running a USD 800 billion current account deficit.
Full presentation:
2014 May Update Macro Presentation
via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1teS4a0 Tyler Durden