For years, investors, business strategists, and policymakers worldwide have turned to one book to help them translate the massive flow of economic data into knowledge for intelligent decision-making. "The Wall Street Journal" called this book ..".the real deal," saying it "miraculously breathes life into economic indicators and statistics." That book is Bernie Baumohl's classic best-seller "The Secrets of Economic Indicators." Now, in a brand-new Third Edition, Baumohl has thoroughly updated his classic to reflect the latest US and foreign economic indicators, and brand-new insights into what all of today's leading indicators mean. Baumohl introduces dozens of new, forward-looking economic markers, including those that monitor small business plans, freight traffic shifts, web searches, and even gambling. He also presents several real-time foreign indicators for anticipating swings in European and Asian economies. He explains what's happened to the global and domestic U.S. economy in recent years, showing how financial crises impact investments, strategy, and economic indicators. New graphics more clearly illuminate how key indicators impact interest rates, bond and stock prices, and currency values; and hundreds of websites containing US and global economic indicators have been updated. This classic book has long been considered an invaluable resource by professionals who need to understand the true meaning of the latest economic trends. With this new edition, Bernie Baumohl has made it even more useful.
The title and presentation seems to promise much. One look at it will give you the impression that this is a title that provides a deeper level of analysis towards economic indicators that we read so much in today’s headlines.
Unfortunately the book serves to be nothing more than just a brochure of the various formal economic indicators and industry standards. Each indicator is introduced by just several lines of its origins and what it tracks. This includes the GDP, unemployment rates, manufacturing output figures and such.
Though whimsical details are given on how the particular indicator could be useful to equities, currencies and bonds, this will amount to nothing more than just half a page at the very most. It will be difficult to imagine how miniscule information such as these would serve to tell you “hidden clues to future economic trends”.
Would be useful for the beginner but holds nothing new for the seasoned investor.
I read this stuff so you don't have to. Great reference materials and tools. Worth the price. As a book to read front to back like I did... you should pass. Just shoot me a question and I'll look it up for you.
Good as a primer. Don't expect to really learn the hidden clues of investment opportunities. It's more like a primer book and reference book of all important and less important economic data. For each data it explains well what the data is, a brief history, some mechanism, meaning of numbers. It's a good starter book if you wonder what all the numbers in economic release mean. It's also a handy reference book to have in your shelves to look up to from time to time.
This is a pretty good reference book on the various economic indicators one can use if you want to become an investor/trader, I really enjoyed the layout and the almost for-dummy style writing. However, the introduction was quite cringe worthy; it is also mainly focused on the United States context, which is not as useful if you are foreign.
This is a reference book, that should be on your desk all the time Reading it from cover to cover is ok but will not help. If you follow certain economic indicators , it will be better and more beneficial to read the relevant title related to that economic Indicator just before or after the release.
The author tried so hard to make this topic interesting and readable... but there's only so many hundreds of pages you can read about economics before your brain implodes.
This is a comprehensive book that explains macroeconomic indicators, which ones markets react to, and why. Also provides useful guidance for researching economies outside of the U.S.
Dull dry and boring. It’s an economic textbook arranged without any specific theme. Reports unrelated appear out of nowhere and scuttle your interest. The only thing is the key learning about which reports are to be more interestingly scrutinised. Also , US based and focussed.
I read this book with the perspective of being in an office that does economic forecasting and pays for compilations of several of the indicators listed. I also have taught and used these indicators in undergraduate economics courses. Baumohl's value added is the research he's done on how each indicator is compiled and how it correlates with other indicators. For example: How many firms are surveyed, what questions are on the survey, what is the typical response rate, how does the indicator tend to correlate with future GDP growth (basic rules of thumb), what is the history of the survey, etc.? I've read books like Capital Ideas that give the history of the creation of the Dow, S&P, and other indicators we see on the nightly news, and this book is somewhat similar. If you've never been exposed to reports from the BLS, BEA, etc., this book is a tutorial on what's what.
The major indices are updated daily by Bill McBride at calculatedrisk.com (which I check first thing every morning), and he makes handy charts. But he focuses more heavily on real estate and does not cover dozens of indicators included in this book (some for good reason as some have minimal impact).
Here's how I recommend reading it: Make a spreadsheet with tabs for leading, coincident, and lagging economic indicators (I made an additional one for international). Add indicators to the sheet where appropriate, follow the links (or search to find the correct ones as my version of the book [2008] has several broken links) and start tracking the numbers as they update over time. This gives you a one-page snapshot of the trends of several indicators as opposed to just one at a time, as you generally get with the news. It's a bit like reading an encyclopedia, but is a reference that should be on the shelf of anyone interested in the economy. 4 stars out of 5.
Despite the author's jokes, 'To make this work, a book on economic indicators has to be sexy. Edgy. Really funny.' This is not the type of book that you want to read cover to cover, unless of course you fantasize about John Galbraith and Milton Friedman in bikinis during your sleeping hours. This book should conjure up images of the Sahara for dryness.
That said, this is one awesome reference; listing out the various indicators, their sources and a dissection of their meaning and impact on the economy (think leading, lagging, etc.). Anyone interested in investing or understanding the truth of economics news in order to form an educated opinion (rather than the kindergarten level interpretation the network news throws at us with their requisite spin). This is a tool, and _should_ be a part of any masters level macro-economics class. P-)
fantastic book for those that want to better understand the monthly numbers that come out, how important they are, and how to interpret them. Very well laid out book for people who want a quick reference.