David Rosenberg
David Rosenberg
David Rosenberg, born in 1965, is a French art curator and author, specialized in modern and contemporary art...
ProfessionMusical.ly Star
Date of Birth19 April 1997
business economic fed intent katrina raising rates rebuild seems stimulus trump view
The Fed seems intent on raising rates through this Katrina business on the view that the pending rebuild stimulus will trump the near-term economic loss.
fed policy remove
The Fed may remove 'measured' or 'accommodative' from the policy statement.
balance coming consensus exuberant far quarter
The consensus was too exuberant coming into this quarter -- and probably is too exuberant for the balance of the year, as far as I can see.
continuing excess global pressures relentless widespread
The continuing story is relentless global competitive pressures and widespread excess capacity.
energy inflation seeing sort
I'm not seeing any sort of big broadening out of inflation from the energy side. That's probably the overriding story.
average bond domestic endured five following fully growth past percentage quarter rates seen since time yield
When rates back up, growth slows quickly. Fully three-quarters of the time in the past five years when we endured a bond yield spasm like we have seen since mid-January, GDP (Gross Domestic Product) growth slowed the following quarter and by an average of one percentage point.
america backs corporate growth lack lingering onto power pricing process shifting wage whether
Whether it's lingering layoffs, receding real wage growth or cutbacks in health/pension benefits, corporate America is now in the process of shifting its lack of pricing power onto the backs of its workforce,
ask believes fed growth question rates weakest
We have one of the weakest growth rates ever during a tightening cycle, and we have to ask the question why the Fed still believes it is accommodative at 3.75 percent,
average bond domestic endured five following fully growth past percentage quarter rates seen since time yield
When rates back up, growth slows . . . quickly. Fully three-quarters of the time in the past five years when we endured a bond yield spasm like we have seen since mid-January, GDP (gross domestic product) growth slowed the following quarter and by an average of one percentage point.