David Woo | |
---|---|
Alma mater |
Columbia University Tufts University |
Occupation | CEO of David Woo Unbound [1] |
Years active | July 2021 – Present |
David Woo is the CEO of David Woo Unbound, a global forum devoted to the promotion of fact-based debates about markets, politics, and economics. Woo was previously the Head of Global Interest Rates, Foreign Exchange, Emerging Market Fixed Income & Economics Research at Bank of America, where he researched the world financial markets. Woo is known for his contrarian calls on the 2016 United States elections, [2] the 2015 devaluation of the renminbi, [3] Bitcoin, [4] [5] and the future of the Euro. [6] He was voted as one of the twelve smartest people on Wall Street in 2013 by Business Insider. [7]
In September 2016, Woo said "markets were failing to adequately price in the probability of a Trump win" [2] and predicted that "if Trump won, it would bring about a stronger dollar and higher rates thanks to fiscal stimulus". [8]
In April 2015, Woo argued that the renminbi was set to fall because "China cannot allow for looser capital flows while maintaining its monetary policy targets, which include limiting the yuan's moves against the US dollar. [3] In June 2015, Woo called the Chinese equity rally the "world’s largest bubble since dot-com boom of the late 1990s" [9] and predicted that Chinese shares "may drop as much as 30%", and creating a "knock-on effect on the whole world economy." [10] After the August 2015 renminbi devaluation, Woo predicted the renminbi could decline further by as much as 10% against the dollar in 2016. [11] Woo also argued that this would have global repercussions, including a "shallower Fed cycle." [12] [13]
In December 2013, Woo argued that Bitcoin "can become a major means of payment for e-commerce and may emerge as a serious competitor to traditional money transfer providers", an opinion that Joe Weisenthal said "represents a top-fligh kappat mind at a major financial institution assessing it in a serious way, and coming to the conclusion that it could be the real deal." [4] [5] However, Woo put the upper bound of Bitcoin’s fair value at $1300, [14] stating that "Bitcoin is highly volatile, the result of speculation activities, and that's hindering its general acceptance as a form of payment." [14]
In July 2012, in a cost-benefit analysis of whether individual members of the Eurozone should stay with the euro, David Woo and Athanasios Vamvakidis argued that “Italy and Ireland emerge as the countries with the greatest incentive to exit.” They concluded that a much weaker euro was necessary to reduce the incentive of any country to exit. [6]
In March 2013, Woo argued that "rising U.S. crude oil and natural gas production will likely lift the American greenback against major currencies" by shrinking the US current account deficit, boosting investment and reducing the correlation between the dollar and oil prices. [15]
Woo said markets were failing to accurately price in the probability of a Trump win, almost treating the election as a "nonevent." He said then that if Trump won, it would bring about a stronger dollar thanks to fiscal stimulus.
In a note to clients, David Woo, head of global rates and currencies research at Bank of America Merrill, said China cannot allow for looser capital flows while maintaining its monetary-policy targets, which include limiting the yuan's moves against the U.S. dollar.
The risk of a euro-zone breakup may actually be rising rather than falling, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch strategists David Woo and Athanasios Vamvakidis. Using game theory to consider how the situation might evolve, they believe the crisis will boil down to a game of bluff between Italy and Germany in which neither country has an incentive to back down.
As head of global rates and currencies research at BAML, David Woo has to keep track of a lot of different things at once – and for those interested in global macro, Woo's perspective is a must-read. Recently, he flagged developments across major world markets as inconsistent, warning of a global slowdown and a major market re-alignment. Woo remains cautious on the outlook for the U.S. economy in the short term, along with its implication for risk assets. However, he says that if the economy begins to improve along the lines of what stocks are already pricing in, then the euro could be the biggest beneficiary.
David Woo says investors are still underestimating the real estate mogul's chances of ascending to the highest office in the land, and what a seismic change this could be for markets and the world's largest economy.
No other stock market has ever grown this much in dollar terms over a 12-month period. David Woo, the head of Global Rates and Currencies Research at Bank of America, has called it the world's largest stock market bubble since the dot-com boom of the 1990s.
Woo said China's rally has become so big -- he called it the world's largest bubble since dot-com boom of the late 1990s -- that the eventual collapse will have consequences for markets around the world. Chinese shares may drop as much as 30 percent when the mania ends, weighing on consumers who have been an important driver of growth in Asia's largest economy, Woo said. He expects the selloff will be bullish for the dollar and U.S. Treasuries. It will have a "knock on effect on the whole world economy," Woo said. "The only thing that's holding up the Chinese economy are the Chinese consumers right now. The Chinese consumers are all involved in the Chinese stock market."
In "The Great Divorce," published in November 2015, Woo outlined the biggest call of his career, arguing that China's currency could tumble as much as 10 percent against the dollar in 2016. The estimate was the fourth-most pessimistic of more than 40 forecasts. The onshore yuan has fallen more than 7 percent since, reaching an eight-year low last month and leaving rival strategists racing to catch up.
The strategist believes that the Federal Reserve's terminal rate—the ceiling for how high its policy rate will go—will be dragged down by the decline in China's currency..
David Woo | |
---|---|
Alma mater |
Columbia University Tufts University |
Occupation | CEO of David Woo Unbound [1] |
Years active | July 2021 – Present |
David Woo is the CEO of David Woo Unbound, a global forum devoted to the promotion of fact-based debates about markets, politics, and economics. Woo was previously the Head of Global Interest Rates, Foreign Exchange, Emerging Market Fixed Income & Economics Research at Bank of America, where he researched the world financial markets. Woo is known for his contrarian calls on the 2016 United States elections, [2] the 2015 devaluation of the renminbi, [3] Bitcoin, [4] [5] and the future of the Euro. [6] He was voted as one of the twelve smartest people on Wall Street in 2013 by Business Insider. [7]
In September 2016, Woo said "markets were failing to adequately price in the probability of a Trump win" [2] and predicted that "if Trump won, it would bring about a stronger dollar and higher rates thanks to fiscal stimulus". [8]
In April 2015, Woo argued that the renminbi was set to fall because "China cannot allow for looser capital flows while maintaining its monetary policy targets, which include limiting the yuan's moves against the US dollar. [3] In June 2015, Woo called the Chinese equity rally the "world’s largest bubble since dot-com boom of the late 1990s" [9] and predicted that Chinese shares "may drop as much as 30%", and creating a "knock-on effect on the whole world economy." [10] After the August 2015 renminbi devaluation, Woo predicted the renminbi could decline further by as much as 10% against the dollar in 2016. [11] Woo also argued that this would have global repercussions, including a "shallower Fed cycle." [12] [13]
In December 2013, Woo argued that Bitcoin "can become a major means of payment for e-commerce and may emerge as a serious competitor to traditional money transfer providers", an opinion that Joe Weisenthal said "represents a top-fligh kappat mind at a major financial institution assessing it in a serious way, and coming to the conclusion that it could be the real deal." [4] [5] However, Woo put the upper bound of Bitcoin’s fair value at $1300, [14] stating that "Bitcoin is highly volatile, the result of speculation activities, and that's hindering its general acceptance as a form of payment." [14]
In July 2012, in a cost-benefit analysis of whether individual members of the Eurozone should stay with the euro, David Woo and Athanasios Vamvakidis argued that “Italy and Ireland emerge as the countries with the greatest incentive to exit.” They concluded that a much weaker euro was necessary to reduce the incentive of any country to exit. [6]
In March 2013, Woo argued that "rising U.S. crude oil and natural gas production will likely lift the American greenback against major currencies" by shrinking the US current account deficit, boosting investment and reducing the correlation between the dollar and oil prices. [15]
Woo said markets were failing to accurately price in the probability of a Trump win, almost treating the election as a "nonevent." He said then that if Trump won, it would bring about a stronger dollar thanks to fiscal stimulus.
In a note to clients, David Woo, head of global rates and currencies research at Bank of America Merrill, said China cannot allow for looser capital flows while maintaining its monetary-policy targets, which include limiting the yuan's moves against the U.S. dollar.
The risk of a euro-zone breakup may actually be rising rather than falling, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch strategists David Woo and Athanasios Vamvakidis. Using game theory to consider how the situation might evolve, they believe the crisis will boil down to a game of bluff between Italy and Germany in which neither country has an incentive to back down.
As head of global rates and currencies research at BAML, David Woo has to keep track of a lot of different things at once – and for those interested in global macro, Woo's perspective is a must-read. Recently, he flagged developments across major world markets as inconsistent, warning of a global slowdown and a major market re-alignment. Woo remains cautious on the outlook for the U.S. economy in the short term, along with its implication for risk assets. However, he says that if the economy begins to improve along the lines of what stocks are already pricing in, then the euro could be the biggest beneficiary.
David Woo says investors are still underestimating the real estate mogul's chances of ascending to the highest office in the land, and what a seismic change this could be for markets and the world's largest economy.
No other stock market has ever grown this much in dollar terms over a 12-month period. David Woo, the head of Global Rates and Currencies Research at Bank of America, has called it the world's largest stock market bubble since the dot-com boom of the 1990s.
Woo said China's rally has become so big -- he called it the world's largest bubble since dot-com boom of the late 1990s -- that the eventual collapse will have consequences for markets around the world. Chinese shares may drop as much as 30 percent when the mania ends, weighing on consumers who have been an important driver of growth in Asia's largest economy, Woo said. He expects the selloff will be bullish for the dollar and U.S. Treasuries. It will have a "knock on effect on the whole world economy," Woo said. "The only thing that's holding up the Chinese economy are the Chinese consumers right now. The Chinese consumers are all involved in the Chinese stock market."
In "The Great Divorce," published in November 2015, Woo outlined the biggest call of his career, arguing that China's currency could tumble as much as 10 percent against the dollar in 2016. The estimate was the fourth-most pessimistic of more than 40 forecasts. The onshore yuan has fallen more than 7 percent since, reaching an eight-year low last month and leaving rival strategists racing to catch up.
The strategist believes that the Federal Reserve's terminal rate—the ceiling for how high its policy rate will go—will be dragged down by the decline in China's currency..