A practical guide to understanding how key economic and market statistics drive financial market trends
The recent global financial crisis stressed the need for economists who understand how key economic and market statistics drive financial market trends and how to mitigate the risks for businesses that those trends affect. Trading Economics provides guidance for navigating key market figures in a convenient and practical format. Emphasizing the link between economic data and market movements, this book analyzes surveys, economic growth statistics, inflation, labor markets, international trade, monetary and fiscal indicators, and their relevance in financial markets. It bypasses complex terminology to offer a hands-on, accessible introduction to financial statistics and how to profit from them.
* Offers clear illustrations and an easy-to-read layout to teach you how to trade profitably in financial markets and minimizes risk for your business
* Written Trevor Williams and Victoria Turton, authoritative public figures with experience working on the New York Stock Exchange
* Includes a website featuring a blog and new surveys as they develop accompanies the book
Complete with worked examples and updated information, Trading Economics is an essential, comprehensive guide to understanding every aspect of financial market trends and how to navigate them to your advantage.
Autorentext
Trevor Williams joined Lloyds Banking Group from the UK Civil Service after doing some lecturing. Trevor is currently the Chief Economist at Lloyds Bank, Commercial Banking. He regularly writes articles for publications and appears in the financial press and on television to represent economic views. Trevor is a member of the Institute for Economic Affairs Shadow Monetary Policy Committee, made up of City economists and academics. This is the oldest 'shadow' MPC, set up two months after the official MPC began in 1997. He is a visiting Professor, Banking and Finance, Derby University.
Victoria Turton graduated from the universities of Sheffield and Manchester with degrees in History before joining the Bank of Scotland Corporate. She is currently a Senior Copywriter at Editions Financial as well as a freelance writer and editor. She lives in North Yorkshire and is married with two sons.
Klappentext
In the wake of an unprecedented financial crisis, of a magnitude not seen for almost 100 years, understanding how key economic and market statistics drive financial market trends is vital for students, traders and market practitioners.
Global economics has encountered a seismic shift. In the UK, 16 years of uninterrupted growth ended in double-dip recession. The US encountered its biggest ever recession. Emergent economies are jostling to join the top rank and we are witnessing the rise of alternative financial centres and a new global financial market landscape. These trends are leading to rapid and unprecedented change. New technology is making markets more accessible and transparent and investment decisions are instantly reflected in market pricing, creating scope for greater market volatility. Many of these decisions are made on a data driven, statistics based materiality. Unfolding news, as reflected in economic and market data, is leading to a greater need to understand these figures, and what different interpretations can mean for investable assets.
Trading Economics: A Guide to the Use of Economic Statistics for Traders and Practitioners cuts through the economic and market noise, delivering a clear view of how statistics interact to create and demonstrate economic trends and movements. Of equal value to market traders and practitioners, financiers, government officials, financial journalists, economics and business students as to the interested observer, the book is presented in an easy to reference layout, using language that eschews jargon. It provides a unique insight into the statistics that have an impact on global financial markets and offers a hands on guide for those who want to understand how financial statistics work, and how to profit from them in the widest sense.
Inhalt
Acknowledgements ix
Introduction xi
Surprise Indices xii
Mapping a New Landscape xix
1 Surveys 1
Surveys and Behavioural Economics 2
Types of Survey 3
Business Surveys 3
Consumer Surveys 21
Conclusion 28
2 Economic Growth 31
Economic Growth Through the Ages 31
GDP 34
What Is GDP? 39
Breaking Down GDP 42
Why Is GDP Important? How Is It Measured? 43
Index Numbers of GDP and the Price Deflators
Used in Calculating Them 45
Detailed Breakdown of the GDP Measures 48
AMarket Link 61
Components of GDP 62
Conclusion 64
3 Labour Markets 65
Employment Trends 66
What Has Driven the Change? 70
Consequences for Economic Growth 72
Phillips Curve Shows no Durable Trade-Off Exists 74
NAIRU Matters More 75
Employment Measures 76
Why We Measure Unemployment 77
The Nature of Unemployment 79
The Impact of Demographics on Labour Markets 81
Vacancies 90
Changing Labour Patterns 92
The UK in Comparison to Its Global Competitors 96
How Do We Extract Value from This? 96
Conclusion 98
4 Inflation 99
What Is Inflation? 99
The History of Inflation 99
Causes of Inflation 101
Earnings/Wage Inflation 109
Price Basket 110
How Is Price Inflation Measured? 110
GDP Deflator 111
Why so Many Measures of Inflation? 112
A Focus on the CPI and RPI 118
Why Is Inflation Important? 122
Deflation 123
Other Measures of Inflation Targeting 123
How Can We Extract Value from This? 125
Conclusion 125
5 Monetary Statistics 127
Monetary Policy and Inflation Management 130
The UK in a Global Context 133
Central Bank's Role 133
What About the Bank of England? 135
How Monetary Policy Works in the UK 136
Decomposition of Money 144
Why Does Money Supply Matter? 149
Why Is This Sort of Analysis Useful? 155
A Brief History of Monetary Targeting 155
How Do We Extract Value from This? 158
Conclusion 158
6 Fiscal Indicators 161
A Brief History of UK Fiscal Policy 163
Measuring Government Debt 164
Fiscal Policy Impact and Terminology 166
The Impact of Government on Markets 168
Fiscal Policy and Growth 168
The Data We Should Consider 169
Fiscal Policy in Boom and Bust 170
Market Relevance 173
Bank of England Regains Regulatory Powers 176
What Role Does the Office for Budget Responsibility Play in the Fiscal Policy Process? 180
The Monetary Policy Committee 181
Forward Guidance Another Bank Innovation 183
The Debt Management Office's Role 185
Comparison of International Debt 188
Fiscal Targets Add Credibility to Debt Reduction 190
How Can We Extract Value from This? 192
Conclusion 193
7 Global Trade Statistics 195
What Is a Country's Balance of Payments? 197
Why Do We Measure the Balance of Payments? 197
What Does It Mean? 198
The Concept of the Balance of Payments 199
UK Is Not Alone in Having a Trade Deficit 204
A Chronic Goods Deficit 208
A Chronic Services Surplus to Offset (Almost) the Trade Deficit 210
The Ever-Changing Pattern of Visible and Invisible Trade 213
Balance of Payments and GDP 222
Shifting Trade Patterns 222
How Can We Extract Value from This? 224
Conclusion 225
Conclusion 227