Jeff Speakes, Ph.D.
Jeff Speakes is Director of Financial Markets at California Lutheran University’s Center for Economic Research and Forecasting. Jeff is also president of Kern Economics, a firm specializing in economics consulting and market risk advisory services. He was formerly Senior Managing Director and Chief Economist at Countrywide Financial Corporation where he oversaw interest rate hedging, economic forecasting, and quantitative model development and validation. He was responsible for the design, development and ongoing management of Countrywide’s leading-edge servicing hedge operation.
Read BioCERF Blog: Posts by Jeff Speakes
I’ve argued in the past that wealth acquisition is a good thing (provided it does not arise from theft or fraud). There are several reasons for this. The most obvious is that spectacular wealth generally arises from spectacular success of an entrepreneurial venture, which almost by definition means the creation of some great new product… Read more
Stock market prices fell 12% during the first week of February. This comes after a rally of 25% during the previous thirteen months (all percentages based on movements in the S&P500 stock index). Naturally, this is of concern to investors. But it is not necessarily a big deal. In fact, it could be a good… Read more
The Federal Reserve quarterly Flow of Funds report shows that Household sector net worth (value of assets less liabilities) reached nearly $100 trillion in 2017, more than five times GDP. Economic theory has a difficult time in explaining why households have accumulated this much wealth. According to the Life Cycle Consumption Model, people save during… Read more
Ray Dalio is the founder of Bridgewater Partners (BWP), the largest hedge fund in the world. He has recently published a book Principles in which he describes the work and life principles that have contributed to Bridgewater’s success. The primary goal since the firm’s inception in 1975 was to be an “idea meritocracy” based on… Read more
It is well known that one really good way to get extremely rich is to hold a large concentrated position, often as the founder, in the stock of a company that realizes extraordinary success. Another way, generally viewed to be less reliable, is to win the lottery. In a very interesting research report, finance professor… Read more
James Parry knew at a young age that he wanted to grow up to be a money manager. It was during his undergraduate years at the University of Washington in Seattle, that the economics major first subscribed to the Financial Analysts Journal (FAJ), the flagship publication of the professional society for Chartered Financial Analysts (CFAs). … Read more
In a stunning memoir (Beer Money), Frances Stroh, the great-great-granddaughter of beer magnate Bernard Stroh, catalogs the collapse of the family business and family wealth in less than one generation. The Stroh’s were one of the richest families in America as recently as the 1980s, worth $700 million according to Forbes Magazine. Refusing to bring… Read more
Susan Gates, a long-time executive at the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Company (Freddie Mac), has written a riveting account (The Days of Slaughter) of her years at the company, leading up to and through the financial crisis of 2007-2008. As you may recall, the two major Government Sponsored Entities (GSES) Freddie Mac and older and… Read more
A typical device used in designing company strategy when financial outcomes depend strongly on a market price is a so-called “hedge report” or “sensitivity report” that shows the change in profits or market value associated with a positive or negative change in the underlying market price (which is sometimes called a “risk factor”). When portrayed… Read more
You may recall the movie Forrest Gump in which the title character, played by Tom Hanks, was a simple person who happened to have a ringside seat on many of the major events in American history in the 1950s through the 1970s. Forrest may have had a low IQ, but he was extraordinarily successful –… Read more