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Extracted Text (OCR)
Exhibit 25: Conference Board Consumer
Confidence Index
The labor market recovery has led to a steady increase in
consumer confidence.
Index Points
160
140
20 113.7
91.5
Conference Board Consumer Confidence
4 =———< Historical Average
Post-Global Financial Crisis Average
0 =
1978 1982 1986 1990 1994 1998 2002 2006 2010 2014
Data through December 2016.
Note: Series starts in January 1978. Post-GFC average begins in July 2009.
Source: Investment Strategy Group, Datastream.
Exhibit 26: Gallup Poll on Satisfaction With the
Direction of the US
Dissatisfaction remains at a very high level, similar to that at
the beginning of the global financial crisis.
% of Respondents
100
90
80
70
Beginning of Global
Financial Crisis
War in Iraq
September 11th
War in Afghanistan
0
1979 1983 1987 1991 1995 1999 2003 2007 2011 2015
Data through December 2016.
Note: The poll asks, “In general, are you satisfied or dissatisfied with the way things are going in
the United States at this time?”
Source: Investment Strategy Group, Gallup.
Other high-profile cyberattacks included
e The announced theft of the account
information of 1 billion Yahoo users in 2013
and 500 million Yahoo users in 2014°’
¢ The theft of information from as many
as 700,000 accounts at the Internal
Revenue Service®®
e A suspected Chinese military hack into the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation®”
e The theft of 117 million LinkedIn passwords
(stolen in 2012 but announced in 2016)”
The risks of cyberattacks continue to increase.
Outlook | Investment Strategy Group 31
The risks of cyberattacks continue to increase.
To date, the attacks have had limited detrimental
impact on the broad US economy, but the impact
could be far-reaching if foreign governments such
as Russia or China, criminal entities, or lone actors
attack critical infrastructure in the US or any other
major country.
China Submerges Under Its Debt Burden and
Capital Outflows
At $11.4 trillion, China is the second-largest
economy in the world, with a 13.8% share of
global exports and a 9.7% share of global imports.
It accounts for nearly half of global
demand for zinc, tin, steel, copper and
nickel, and more than half for thermal
coal, aluminum and iron ore. Any major
slowdown or volatility across bond,
currency and equity markets in China,
including Hong Kong, would have major
ramifications for the rest of the world.
While the US has limited direct
economic exposure to China—only 0.6%
of exports as a share of GDP, 0.6%
of bank assets and 0.7% of corporate
profits—any shocks in China will
reverberate through US financial markets.
As shown earlier in Exhibit 18 on page
19, US financial conditions tightened by
118 basis points in the summer of 2015
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