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  • Broadway Show Attendance Strong

    Torsten Sløk

    Apollo Chief Economist

    Going to a Broadway show can cost up to $200, and the latest weekly data shows that consumers are still happy to pay this discretionary expense, see the first chart below.

    More broadly, GDP growth in the second quarter was 3.0%, and the Atlanta Fed GDP estimate for the third quarter is 3.2%, see the second and third chart.

    Why is the economy so strong? Because of lower interest rate sensitivity for households and firms because of locked-in low interest rates, strong AI spending, and strong fiscal spending driven by the CHIPS Act, the IRA, and the Infrastructure Act. Combined with high stock prices and tight credit spreads, these forces are offsetting the long and variable lags of monetary policy.

    See our chart book with daily and weekly indicators.

    Weekly Broadway show attendance
    Source: Internet Broadway Database, Apollo Chief Economist
    Real GDP growth remains strong
    Source: BEA, Haver Analytics, Apollo Chief Economist
    2024 Q3 GDP estimate from Atlanta Fed: 3.2%
    Source: Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, Haver Analytics, Apollo Chief Economist

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  • S&P 500 Sector Returns During Soft Landings

    Torsten Sløk

    Apollo Chief Economist

    Healthcare, financials, and consumer staples outperform during Fed cut episodes that end with a soft landing, see chart below.

    S&P 500 sector returns during soft landing Fed cut episodes
    Note: The data represents cumulative total returns of each sector during the two rate cut cycles (July 1995-January 1996 and September 1998-November 1998) that did not overlap with a recession. Source: Bloomberg, Apollo Chief Economist

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  • Share of the Population Voting in Elections

    Torsten Sløk

    Apollo Chief Economist

    Voter turnout rates differ dramatically across states, with a 70% participation rate in Oregon and 38% in West Virginia, see chart below.

    How many people vote is US elections, by state
    Note: Data for Midterm elections 2022. Source: The Brookings Institution, Apollo Chief Economist

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  • Prime brokerage borrowing is now at $2.3 trillion, up from around $1 trillion before the pandemic, see chart below.

    More than $2 trillion in prime brokerage borrowing
    Note: The data are aggregated responses to SEC Form PF question 43. Only responses from Qualifying Hedge Funds are included.
    Source: Data for the US Office of Financial Research, Apollo Chief Economist

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  • Data Centers’ Share of Total Power Consumption

    Torsten Sløk

    Apollo Chief Economist

    Data centers use 26% of Virginia’s total power consumption, and there is a significant need for long-term investments in energy to power the ongoing AI revolution, see map below.

    Data centers’ share of total power consumption
    Note: There is no data available for states shaded in grey. Source: Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), Apollo Chief Economist

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  • The share of land owned by the federal government varies dramatically across states, see chart below.

    85% of the land in Nevada is federally owned. In California it is 46%, and in New York it is 0%.
    Source: World Population Review, Apollo Chief Economist

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  • The time it takes for applications for US citizenship has declined from 12 months to four months, which contributes to accelerating immigration growth at the moment.

    Median Processing Times for application for Naturalization
    Note: Year indicates fiscal year. Source: US Citizenship and Immigration Services, Apollo Chief Economist

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  • No Need for Fed Cuts

    Torsten Sløk

    Apollo Chief Economist

    The incoming data continues to remain robust. The US economy added 254,000 jobs in September versus a consensus expectation of 150,000 jobs, the unemployment rate fell from 4.2% to 4.1%, wage growth is solid and remains sticky, job openings are going up, and the ISM services reading is also strong.

    Why is the economy still strong? Because of lower sensitivity to Fed hikes for consumers and firms with locked-in low interest rates. Because of strong AI spending. Because of strong fiscal and defense spending. These tailwinds are countering the long and variable lags of monetary policy. And now the Fed is cutting rates, which is boosting growth and inflation further. Combined with very easy financial conditions, the bottom line remains that rates will stay higher for longer.

    Our chart book with daily and weekly data is available here.

    Wage growth went up in September and remains sticky above pre-pandemic levels
    Source: BLS, Haver Analytics, Apollo Chief Economist

    WARN data points to lower claims in coming months
    Note: The Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act helps ensure 60 to 90 days advance notice in cases of qualified plant closings and mass layoffs. WARN factor is the Cleveland Fed estimate for WARN notices (https://www.clevelandfed.org/publications/working-paper/wp-2003r-advance-layoff-notices-and-aggregate-job-loss). Source: Department of Labor, Haver Analytics, Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, Apollo Chief Economist

    Default rates declining
    Source: PitchBook LCD, Apollo Chief Economist

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  • Asymmetric Policymaking

    Torsten Sløk

    Apollo Chief Economist

    When FOMC members put together their forecasts, they are asked about the risks to their projections.

    You would think that the risks to your forecast were symmetric over time. But, as the chart below shows, FOMC members are always much more worried about the risk that the unemployment rate is rising than the risk that the unemployment rate is falling. 

    This preference for unemployment staying low suggests that policymakers would prefer to cut interest rates too much too quickly to minimize the risk that the unemployment rate will move higher. Which of course increases the risk that inflation starts to move up again.

    Fed officials are much more worried about rising unemployment than falling unemployment
    Note: No survey was conducted in March 2020. Source: Federal Reserve, Apollo Chief Economist

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  • The share of the population using the internet in India has increased over the past decade from 14% to 52%, see chart below.

    Internet adoption rising rapidly in India
    Note: Internet adoption rate is defined as number of individuals using the internet as a % of total population. Source: Kepois Analysis via datareportal.com

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