3 Stories in the global economy that should not go un-noticed
Happy Holidays!Stocks broke their losing streak and rallied on the long-awaited Fed taper and positive economic news. The Fed announced a modest taper of $10 billion, reducing the size of its monthly bond purchases to $75 billion. In order to make the tapering pill easier to swallow, the Fed pledged to keep rates near their current levels until the headline unemployment rate declines below 6.5%.
In Washington, the Senate approved the bipartisan budget deal, avoiding any last-minute brinksmanship. The bill guides government spending into 2015 and will avoid another government shutdown and will eliminate some sequestration cuts.
For the week, the S&P 500 gained 2.42%, the Dow surged 2.96%, and MSCI EAFE (developed international) added 2.58%.
Here are the 3 stories this week that rose above the noise:

Buyback Binge Is Back
Last quarter, U.S. companies bought back stock and paid dividends totaling $207 billion, the highest amount since the fourth quarter of 2007. Companies that represent this group have been rewarded as the S&P 500 Buyback Index, which measures the 100 stocks with the highest buyback ratios, has surged 45% this year, compared with a 28% rally for the S&P 500. The question now is whether companies are purchasing their stock at the wrong time, similar to what occurred in 2007 prior to the financial crisis. The concern is whether the market is due for long anticipated pullback.
Consumer Sentiment Up in December on Improved Economic Outlook
U.S. consumer confidence rose to its highest level since July as the Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan Index of consumer sentiment increased to 82.5 in December, ahead of 75.1 in November. The results were encouraging and signal an improved outlook for consumer spending heading into 2014. The survey showed consumer sentiment improved from a more optimistic outlook on economic growth, improving job prospects, and rising household wealth.
China Money Rate Tumbles Most Since 2011 as PBOC Injects Cash
A recent Bloomberg article details actions by China's central bank yesterday to ease on ongoing cash crunch which had driven up short-term borrowing costs and put downward pressure on Chinese equities. After the central bank injected funds for the first time in three weeks, China's benchmark money-market rate declined the most it has in a day since February 2011. The ongoing tight money conditions in China have many economists worried that growth may slow even further in 2014, which would have bearish implications for emerging market equities, and the country's money-market rate will be important to watch in early 2014 for evidence that policy makers are getting more aggressive about providing liquidity to the market.
Articles chosen and summarized by the First Allied Asset Management, Inc. investment management team.