Fast Facts
Practice Makes Perfect- A pair of 2-year-old Pakistani twins recently saw each other’s faces for the first time after surgery at a London hospital. Safa and Marwa Ullah were born conjoined at the skull, which is extremely rare, and local doctors told the family that separation surgery would likely kill one of the girls. But neurosurgeons at Britain’s Great Ormond Street Hospital offered hope: They created a virtual-reality replica of the girls’ skulls and brains and used a 3D-printed model of their heads to practice the surgery. After a 50-hour operation, the girls were separated; they have now left the hospital. “We are extremely excited about the future,” says mom Zainab Bibi.
Tangled in the Interweb- The country that spends the most time online? The Philippines. The average Filipino spends 10 hours, 2 minutes on the internet per day, nearly double the average for Americans.
Smile!!- Party hosts are spending previously unheard-of sums on extravagant photo booths to impress their guests, said Amanda Gordon in Bloomberg.com. Prices for a 21st century–style “booth” today range from $2,000—for your typical photo-strip variety—to $2 million for “cinematic-quality video from many angles” to go with flower walls and props as large as a hot-air balloon. One Martha’s Vineyard man turned the inside of a 1976 Volkswagen bus into a mobile photo studio with a “vintage feel.” Another creative team set up an “underwater booth” in a swimming pool for the guests of a nonprofit fundraiser, while a Swiss watchmakers’ gala dinner at the Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie in Geneva included a photo booth where “flamethrowers shot a wall of fire behind you at the exact moment of the picture.”
Weekly Focus – Think About It
“Hold yourself responsible for a higher standard than anybody else expects of you. Never excuse yourself. Never pity yourself. Be a hard master to yourself – and be lenient to everybody else.” –Henry Ward Beecher, American minister and speaker
The Markets
Did last week mark the start of a new policy for the Federal Reserve?
The U.S. Federal Reserve has a reputation for providing little transparency about the timing and direction of potential rate changes. That reputation was challenged last week.
In back-to-back speeches, two of the three most influential members of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) – Federal Reserve Vice-Chairman Richard Clarida and Fed Bank of New York President John Williams – made a case for lowering the Fed funds rate to support economic growth, reported Financial Times.
When asked about Fed officials’ comments, a currency strategist cited by Financial Times said, “…the communication we received seemed in many ways to be a coordinated attempt to signal the market given its timing and context…”
The magnitude of the change remains a mystery. Barron’s reported debate remains over whether the Fed will cut rates by 0.25 or 0.50 of a percentage point. On Saturday, the CME FedWatch Tool reported a 77.5 percent probability of the former.
There was some positive economic data last week, including an uptick in U.S. consumer spending and positive manufacturing data from the Philadelphia Fed’s July survey, reported Barron’s. However, the Conference Board Leading Economic Index® declined, indicating growth may remain slow during the second half of the year. The index combines 10 individual leading indicators in an effort to reveal patterns in economic data.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index was down 1.2 percent last week.
HOW HOT WAS IT LAST WEEK? If you were in a region of the United States that didn’t experience some of the hottest and most humid weather in years over the weekend, count your lucky stars.
The Washington Post reported, “The heat wave…comes in the midst of what may turn out to be the hottest month Earth has recorded since instrument records began in the late 19th century…”
So, how hot was it?
It was so hot:
• The National Weather Service staff in Nebraska attempted to bake biscuits inside a car, reported UPI. The biscuits didn’t bake through, but the tops were crispy. The temperature in the pan reached 185 degrees Fahrenheit.
• Paved roads were melting in France and Germany. Deteriorating road conditions caused Germany to impose speed limits on the Autobahn, which usually has no limits at all, reported Bloomberg.
• Bicycles melted and police were called to restore order at public pools in Berlin, Germany, according to tweets cited by Buzzfeed.
The U.S. heat event is expected to end by Tuesday. Forecasters were warning the heat index could rise as high as 115 degrees. If you are in an area afflicted by extreme heat, the National Weather Service advises staying out of the sun, remaining in air-conditioned places, drinking plenty of water, and checking on older or disabled friends and relatives.
Best regards,
John Klevens, CFP
Sources: The Week Magazine, Associated Press
Portions of this newsletter has been prepared by Peak Advisor