Jobs report at 8:30 a.m. excepted to show a gain of around 675K jobs and the unemployment rate dropping to 6.0 percent. A number above one million is not impossible given payback from February weather and widespread re-openings … President Biden is expected to deliver remarks on the jobs report mid-morning before heading to Camp David for the weekend … Stock market is closed for Good Friday; bond market is open half day. PELOSI EYES SALT RELIEF – Our Bernie Becker: “House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said … she hopes that Democrats can ease the current cap on state and local tax deductions as part of a larger infrastructure package. “Several House Democrats from New York and New Jersey say they wouldn’t back any other tax changes unless the state and local tax cap is repealed. Republicans put a $10,000 limit on state and local deductions in their 2017 tax law … ‘I’m sympathetic to their position,’ Pelosi said … ‘Hopefully, we can get it into the bill.” REAL TALK — SALT deductions are a very tough one for Dems. Pretty well-off Democrats in place like New York, New Jersey and California really want those deductions back. But the numbers don’t look that good given the deductions generally benefit wealthier tax payers. And removing the deduction cap would further blow up math on the infrastructure/tax hike package that is already somewhat tenuous. The authors of the 2017 bill knew it would be seriously tough for Dems to lift the cap. And they knew Dems would want to given how hard they hit many big blue state donors. THE MAGIC LOOPHOLE — Our Mary Newman: “Many Democrats have come to the conclusion that they're never going to get Republicans to cooperate on anything. But Chuck Schumer seems to think that he has found a magical loophole in the 1974 Budget Control Act. “It's called Section 304, and you’re about to start hearing about it a lot. Playbook co-author Ryan Lizza breaks down how this obscure legislative loophole could work the latest episode of The Breakdown.” CFTC LOOKS FOR MORE REG ON FAMILY OFFICES — Our Kellie Mejdrich: “Democratic CFTC Commissioner Dan Berkovitz … called for more oversight of so-called family offices used to manage wealthy individuals’ money, the first move by a U.S. regulator to crack down on market risks posed by the recent blowup of Archegos Capital Management. “The CFTC plays a key role overseeing financial derivatives traded by funds like Archegos. The firm triggered market volatility in recent days after the collapse of highly leveraged stock bets spilled over to investment banks that were its trading partners.” FEMA PITCHES “EQUITABLE FLOOD INSURANCE” — Our Zachary Warmbrodt: “FEMA … sought to tamp down growing concerns from Congress that a sweeping overhaul of flood insurance rates would hurt homeowners in the coming years, making the case it's time to end subsidies for high-priced homes in high-risk areas. “In a briefing with reporters, top FEMA officials said ‘transformational’ changes in the works for the National Flood Insurance Program would put an end to a system where low-value homes effectively subsidize insurance policies for high-value homes. The changes entail a whole new approach by FEMA to measuring flood danger, by looking at homes through the lens of their specific replacement costs and individual risks, rather than simply whether they sit in a so-called ‘flood zone.’” ECON FORECASTS GOING UP — Per release: “The Peterson Institute for International Economics raised its forecast for global and US growth for this year and next. The global economy is poised to expand faster, buoyed by vaccinations, with global output on track to expand 5.6 percent in 2021. “In the US, PIIE projects GDP will surge by more than 6 percent this year and an additional 3.5 percent in 2022, while unemployment will decline to 5.0 percent by yearend and 4.4 percent by the end of 2022.” |