Tuesday, November 30, 2010

How Not to Fix Economic Models

Add more money.

The Wall Street Journal notes the Institute for New Economic Thinking was launched last year with $50 million from financier and theorist George Soros. The institute so far has approved funding for more than 27 projects, including efforts by aimed at developing new ways to model the economy. What are their ideas? Remember that Soros' Alchemy of Finance presented the big idea that prices are irrational, which he defined as biased 'in one direction or another' (his other idea, that markets can influence what they predict, playing off his role in the 1992 EMU crisis). He's sympathetic to researchers who would confirm he's not just rich, but a profound, original thinker. Here's the WSJ:
The problem, says Doyne Farmer, is that the models bear too little relation to reality. People aren't quite as rational as models assume, he says. Advocates of traditional economics acknowledge that not all decisions are driven by pure reason.
...
His proposal: Create a richly complex, computer-based simulation of the economy like those scientists use to model weather patterns, epidemics and traffic. Given enough computing power, such "agent-based" models can include millions of individual players, who don't have to be rational or agree with one another. Instead of equations that must be solved, the players have open-ended rules of behavior, such as, "If I've just turned 55 and I'm feeling blue, I'll buy a sports car."

Gee, macro models with lots of equations...hey, that was popular in the 1970s! Jan Tinbergen made the first one in the 1950s. They did not stop using them because they ran out of funding, but rather because they were such an obvious failure. With hundreds of equations based on mini-models of banking, savings, or industry behavior they predicted the past very well, but the future, not so much. Robert Lucas showed these models were internally inconsistent, in that the modelers assumed people would have, say, inflation expectations of 2% while the model implied 4%. Now, this is kind of tempting when applying models to real data, because data is historical, and with the benefit of hindsight, people are biased in one way or another. The problem is, at any one time we don't know which way. Chris Sims showed that much simpler vector auto regressions could predict just as well. By the late 80's these macro models were anachronisms, and the only purveyors are economists over 50, and global climate modelers.

Now, Doyne Farmer has been working on this problem for 20 years, and it's very naive to think all he needs is 10 million dollars and the resulting CPU to cleanly break out of the macroeconomic cul de sac. The idea now is to add new irrationalities, with a hat tip to Kahneman's behavioralist approach. The problem, again, is that irrationalities tend to explain everything, via too much anchoring or lack of base weighting, over-reaction and under-reaction.

The idea that adding new 'behavioralist' equations to the old macro modeling approach is naive because the old approach had hundreds of equations--assumptions about causal relations. Economists are very good at rationalizing behavior, so if some random assumption worked within this paradigm some economist would have accidentally found it the way the momentum effect was found in equity returns. Hundreds, if not thousands, of really bright people looked at this problem for decades, and then retired, and their interns eventually all decided to not follow them to obscurity.

Anything that works can be modeled as rational via clever theorizing; there are very few constraints on the equations in large-scale macro models. In that sense, irrationality with a complex model of this-causes-that is not 'new'. You are going to need something more specific.

The Advisor Weblog

The Advisor Weblog


Indian Rupee, Singapure Dollar and Hong Kong Dollar

Posted: 30 Nov 2010 01:40 PM PST

Tuesday again saw market trading on contagion fears in the euro zone; bond spread yields between Germany and Ireland reached yet again record highs, while rumors about S&P going to review France ratting and actually put Portugal on credit watch negative, have kept the common currency under pressure since early Europe. Dollar continues gaining due to its safe haven status, although fundamental data in the US continues improving: both Chicago PMI and CB Consumer Confidence beat expectations coming at 63.5 and 54.1. Finally stocks ended the day pretty negative, both in Europe and America, yet off daily lows.

EUR/INR extended its slide to a fresh 2 months low at 59.30 price zone, where the cross is actually closing the day. Strongly bearish in daily charts, 4 hours indicators show the pair reaching extreme oversold conditions, yet with no signs of reversing; momentum continues heading south while 20 SMA above current price holds a strong bearish slope. Below 59.30 mentioned daily low, pair will find supports around 59.00 and 58.30, past September 10th strong daily low. Immediate resistance comes around 69.80 static price zone, and above corrections could extend towards 60.20, where the 20 SMA lies. Above this last, not seen at this point, rally could extend towards 60.40/60 price zone.

USD/HKD extended gains to 7.7690 yet closing the day below key 7.7659 October high. 4 hours chart shows momentum heading south quite vertical, approaching to the 100 level yet 20 SMA lies around 7.7640 holding a strong slope while 38.2% retracement of daily rise from 7.7524 to 7.7690 is located around 7.7630, so only below this last, the bearish movement could get stronger, with next supports at 7.7600 (50% retracement of the same rally) and 7.7565. Above 7.7660, resistances come at 7.7690 and 7.7730.

EUR/SGD strong bearish momentum pushed the cross to 1.7105, quoting right now barely above that level. As almost all euro crosses, the bearish momentum remains intact in 4 hours chart, despite the extreme oversold reading RSI shows; below daily low, immediate supports come at 1.7050/60 price zone, followed by 1.7010 while corrections could take place only above 1.7150, towards the 1.7220 price zone.


Beware of gold!

Posted: 30 Nov 2010 05:38 AM PST

With all the dollar run across the board, keep an eye on gold:the metal, safe haven by excellence on turmoil times, is above $ 1385/oz. With dollar overbought and gold so high, we could see some corrective reversals in the next minutes.


EUR/USD gives up 1.3000

Posted: 30 Nov 2010 05:34 AM PST

While Stocks continue to slump and US futures sink to fresh monthtly lows, EUR/USD is breaching the 1.3000 level; Canadian GDP come out negative and below expectations, favoring furhter dollar gains across the board, and EUR/USD now quotes around 1.2970; lose of 1.2955, should trigger a bearish continuation rally towards the 1.2920 strong static support zone.


Best pair to trade now: USD/CHF

Posted: 30 Nov 2010 05:04 AM PST

Majors’ sentiment for today

Posted: 30 Nov 2010 04:58 AM PST

Majors’ sentiment for today:

Eur/Usd: Bearish

Gbp/Usd: Neutral

Usd/Chf: Slightly Bearish

Usd/Jpy: Slightly Bearish

Eur/Gbp: Bearish

Eur/Jpy: Bearish

Gbp/Jpy: Bearish


Starting the day

Posted: 30 Nov 2010 04:55 AM PST

Hi everyone and welcome to this blog! Starting the day late, as I do have an early webinar, and the flu is refusing to leave me since past Wednesday, one full week sleepy mood…oh well! Anyway enjoying my job, i was not made to stay in bed sick ;) . Market continues to be ruled by risk aversion and dollar gains, particularly against Euro and Aussie, as we have seen these past few days.  EUR/USD below daily low main target continues to be 1.2920 price zone, while AUD is quite close to a short term double floor around 0.9565; lose of this last should signal further falls there. Pound continues range bound and delayed compared to the others; below 1.5510, should turn more interesting.

Anyway, quick start! here is the link for today’s calendar, as we have a good bunch of news in the upcoming 2 hours:

http://www.fxstreet.com/fundamental/economic-calendar/

Have a great day!


Monday, November 29, 2010

The Advisor Weblog

The Advisor Weblog


Indian Rupee and Hong Kong Dollar

Posted: 29 Nov 2010 02:21 PM PST

Market attention continues focused in Europe, with Spanish bonds sharing the limelight with Italian ones, both showing soaring yields; meanwhile Greece Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou announced Monday that the country is likely to get an extension for the repayment of its EUR110 billion bailout, with a 4 years grace period and then seven years to repay all the 110 billion euros, in line with the repayment terms of the Irish bailout.

EUR/INR finally broke the daily ascendant trend line coming from June low at 60.45 and extended its slide to 59.80 price zone; currently around 60.12, bearish euro rally looks overextended, suggesting some bullish corrective movements before a new leg down in the cross. Wall Street posted a late recovery from intraday lows, closing barely down, and favoring some improvement in risk sentiment, that should favor such corrections; still the upside should remain limited today by 60.65, where the pair shows 20 SMA in the 4 hours chart, along with the broken trend line. Gains are unlikely to extend yet on contrary, breach of mentioned daily low, should signal a continuation rally towards the 59.00 price zone.

USD/HKD rose to October high at 7.7659 holding a quite bullish tone in the daily chart, although exhausted according to 4 hours one; 20 SMA guides the rally, with an almost vertical slope, now strong support around 7.7614. Break above 7.7659 high, should support further gains in the cross, with next resistances at 7.7680 and 7.7710 price zone. Supports, below 7.7614, are located 7.7585 and 7.7550.


Hourly perspective for US session

Posted: 29 Nov 2010 06:33 AM PST

Majors’ sentiment for today

Posted: 29 Nov 2010 04:25 AM PST

Majors’ sentiment for today:

Eur/Usd: Bearish

Gbp/Usd: Bearish

Usd/Chf: Slightly Bullish

Usd/Jpy: Slightly Bullish

Eur/Gbp: Bearish

Eur/Jpy: Bearish

Gbp/Jpy: Neutral


Starting the day

Posted: 29 Nov 2010 04:21 AM PST

Hi everyone and welcome back! Another week, another euro lose. Despite Asian session saw the common currency opening higher against major rivals, relief over Irish bailout was not able to ease the bearish pressure, and the common currency is back down, hitting fresh monthly lows below 1.3160. Stocks are down, and so do gold, favoring a risk aversion environment that favors dollar, and swissy across the board. Starting the first week of the month, with Central Banks and Payrolls included, not much data is expected for the upcoming hours, but in Canada; still that data will hardly affect the trend. GBP/USD holds below 1.5600, with 1.5560 daily low as key support, while AUD/USD failed to regain 0.9660 strong area, and aims to break below 0.9600. I won’t be paying too much attention to USD/JPY unless daily close well above 84.30 price zone, where the cross has the daily 100 MA. Anyway, will start taking a look at technicals, ahead of US opening, yet risk no doubts, is in charge.

 Here is the link for todays' calendar:

http://www.fxstreet.com/fundamental/economic-calendar/

Have a great day!