Posts in Politics and society
Things to think about #3

Last week, the leasehold and reform bill became law in the UK. This is not the end of leasehold reform. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning. This passage of the bill happened against the odds. It was crawling through parliament and when Rishi Sunak, somewhat unexpectedly, announced the general election on July the 4th, campaigners for leasehold reform—a group which yours truly have been loosely working with for a while—thought the bill would be lost. If you want to understand what happens to outstanding bills in the brief final sessions of parliament before prorogation, you need to read to up on something called wash-up. Put simply, it’s the period where outstanding bills are either rammed through as is, or kicked into the abyss never to be seen again. It is a borderline insane policy process, which breaks all the rules of legislation, simply to get the order book emptied as quickly as possible. The leasehold and reform bill made it, just, though without key additions such as a cap on ground rent or a ban on forfeiture. This is bitterly disappointing, especially in case of the former given that an agreement to cap ground rents to £250 pa was virtually agreed by the department and HMT, or so we’re told. But I guess we live to fight another day rather than having to start over.

Read More
Things to think about #2

I’ve recently come back from a week on Ibiza—the smaller and cooler of the main Spanish Mediterranean isles—enjoying what has to be one of the most fantastic climates on earth. I come back to the realisation that I could have been more spendthrift in the pool bar despite its grotesquely overpriced drinks and snacks. Stocks are flying, credit spreads are narrow and volatility has plunged to a new low for the year. My relatively defensive portfolio is currently tracking a punchy 3.8% monthly gain for May, just shy of the 4.4% rise in the S&P 500. Long may it continue. I will have more to say about this in due course, but in the first instance, my recent work suggests that this rally has one strong tailwind on its side; the cyclical picture in the global economy has improved. My measures of global cyclical activity hit a new high at the end of Q1, and into Q2, from a trough last year, and cyclical equity returns are now re-accelerating, after softening a touch at the start of the year.

Read More
The BIS gets it wrong on AI/LLM and feminism & reproduction

The BIS has a Bulletin out on the usefulness of AI and large language models. They’re not terribly impressed.

When posed with a logical puzzle that demands reasoning about the knowledge of others and about counterfactuals, large language models (LLMs) display a distinctive and revealing pattern of failure. 

The LLM performs flawlessly when presented with the original wording of the puzzle available on the internet but performs poorly when incidental details are changed, suggestive of a lack of true understanding of the underlying logic. 

Our findings do not detract from the considerable progress in central bank applications of machine learning to data management, macro analysis and regulation/supervision. They do, however, suggest that caution should be exercised in deploying LLMs in contexts that demand rigorous reasoning in economic analysis.

Read More
Geopolitical risk returns in the Middle East

I have just returned from two weeks of holiday, and I have a lot on my mind. First things first, on the war between Israel and Hamas; emotions are running high and as a result, the quality of initial opinion and analysis is clouded and governed by hard-held priors. That always make for a treacherous information environment, especially in a situation as complex as is the conflict between Israel and its border states, not to mention the political situation in the Middle East as a whole. I am making the following initial assumptions. As long as it is Israel and Hamas pounding each other to a pulp—with devastating consequences mainly in Gaza as the IDF brings the heat—markets will eventually stop caring. The obvious risk is that a bloody conflict between Hamas and Israel spills over into wider military conflict in the Middle East. It is grim irony that Iran recently warned how a heavy-handed response by Israel “could spiral out of control and ricochet into far-reaching consequences”. Teheran is right, and I suspect that it is exactly what it, Hamas, other key actors in the Middle East, not to mention Russia, want.

Read More