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  • Poll
Hypothetical End of Season Poll:

Would you pick?

  • Win SECCG, but you lose first playoff game

    Votes: 7 4.1%
  • Don’t play in SECCG, you are in the playoffs, but don’t know what happens

    Votes: 163 95.9%

Just a thought experiment.

Given two choices, and only one of these two, on how this season ends, which would you pick today?

Scenario 1: Ole Miss not only gets to Atlanta, but wins the SECCG (let’s say beating Texas). However, we are guaranteed to lose the 2nd round playoff game

Scenario 2: no SECCG, but we get in the playoff and play the first round on the road. That’s it: the outcome is unknown.

The one glaring poll/CFP difference is still Miami

I know that may not be a critical one given that the ACC gets an automatic bid anyway, but the polls have had Miami behind the SEC grouping (Georgia, Bama, Ole Miss) the last few weeks.

The CFP had them ahead. I don’t think it matters, because I think a Miami that loses to SMU is getting bounced anyway, but I would feel better if the CFP would go ahead and mirror the polls on this one. Miami shouldn’t be higher than 10 or 11, and if they are, it’s a clear message that the ACC only gets one bid this year.
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CFB 12 is not very clear but Saturday could clear things up a bit

It would be nice for South Carolina to win out and that becomes a really impressive win on the road. They play Winford this weekend and Clemson next a 9-3 finish for the Cocks would help boost the Rebs.

Games that could really impact the 12 this weekend.

11 AM

Indiana at Ohio State (-12.5) - A big OSU win might push Indiana behind Ole Miss and perhaps out of the 12

Ole Miss (-9.5) at Florida - Rebels need to win bottom line, style points matter but just win.

SMU (-9.5) at Virginia & Wake Forest at Miami (-24) - I think the committee is taking the winner of the ACC Championship and that is it so this only matters. SMU Controls their own destiny for the ACC championship game Miami has the tiebreaker on Louisville and Clemson.

2:30

BYU at Arizona State (-3.5) - Both of these teams can still play in the Big 12 Championship Game.

Kentucky at Texas (-20.5) - Let’s get weird

Penn State (-12) at Minnesota - The Gophers are capable of pulling off the upset, PJ Fleck would love nothing more than to take down Penn State as a double digit dog at home.

Pitt at Louisville (-8) - Doubtful but could have ACC Championship implications if Miami or SMU slip

3:15

Missouri (-8) at Miss State - Has zero playoff implications but will be interesting to see how both these teams play.

6:00

Army at Notre Dame (-15.5) - Army winning would put Notre Dame out and put Army in the conversation for the G4 spot. Army is undefeated and can win the AAC. Could they take Boise’s spot?

6:30

Alabama (-14) at Oklahoma- I don’t see this being a game

Texas A&M (-2.5) at Auburn - Auburn is due, can Hugh pull off a much needed upset? Texas A&M has not been good on the road. This would end Texas A&M’s shot at the 12 which goes through Atlanta anyway.

Vanderbilt at LSU (-9) - As much as it would be fun for Vandy to win I think we need LSU to roll. That keeps Texas best win (Vandy) as not that good of a win. Also makes our LSU loss not look as bad.

Afternoon Library Reading

Monday Morning Outlook
Shut Out the Pessimists
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 8/22/2016

You know the economy is getting better when the pessimists' theories on economic doom have been so wrong for so long they have to start recycling the old ones.

Right after the crisis a wave of mortgage "re-sets" was supposed to cause a double dip recession. The idea was that many of the mortgages taken out in the housing boom, particularly interest-only mortgages, had to re-set at higher interest rates or require principal payments, which would eat up workers' meager earnings, in turn reducing consumer spending and putting us back in recession.

Since that gloom never materialized, some analysts are at it again. Now, home equity lines of credit (HELOCs) are going to cause the recession. But, just like the first time this theory appeared, a little number-crunching shows just how small the problem is relative to the size of the economy.

US consumers have a little less than $500 billion in outstanding HELOCs right now, according to the NY Fed. So let's make the outrageously pessimistic assumption that ALL of them re-set overnight and annual payments on these loans have to double, from about $25 billion per year (5% of $500 billion) to $50 billion per year. That extra $25 billion is only 0.2% of annual consumer spending. In other words, there's nothing to this theory.

The other recession theory grabbing attention is about a tiny portion of the federal budget that is supposedly signaling that all the other bullish reports on the job market are missing the boat. Tax revenue from federal unemployment taxes (or FUTA, a levy on businesses that funds the unemployment insurance program) totaled only $47.2 billion in the past year, versus $66.6 billion back in Fiscal Year 2012. That decline shows that the quality of jobs is heading down and that we are either headed into a recession or there already.

Anyone who makes this argument ought to have his economic credentials revoked, because they clearly don't know how unemployment insurance works. When the US enters a recession, some states end up borrowing money from the federal government, which they repay when the economy starts to heal. Those repayments come in the form of states temporarily getting a smaller share of unemployment tax revenue and the federal government getting a larger share, which is exactly what happened in 2010-2012. Once the repayments are done, states go back to taking more and the federal government takes less.

This pattern is nothing new. Federal unemployment tax revenue surged after the 1981-82 recession, peaking in 1984-85. Stagnation in FUTA receipts after 1985 had nothing to do with slow job growth. The US added 12.4 million jobs from mid-1985 through mid-1990. These receipts also surged after the 1990-91 recession, peaking in 1995. We then added 14.5 million jobs in the next five years. In other words, a peak in FUTA early in an expansion is completely normal.

But the worst part of the analysis is the assertion that federal payroll tax revenue is falling. That's completely untrue. Federal payroll taxes (like Social Security and Medicare) have been $1.1 trillion in the past twelve months, a record high on both an overall and inflation-adjusted basis. And that's true whether you adjust by using the overall consumer price index or the "core" index, which has grown faster because it excludes food and energy.

Even Brexit is having trouble causing the British recession so many feared. British jobless claims fell in July, after Brexit, while British retail sales spiked higher. So much for the end of the world.

Look, someday a recession is going to happen. But with monetary policy loose, tax rates relatively low, and free trade still holding up, it's not happening anytime soon. Smart investors need to focus on the truth and shut out the pessimists.

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