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CFA Level 1
Chapters

1Introduction to CFA Program

2Ethics and Professional Standards

3Quantitative Methods

4Financial Reporting and Analysis

5Corporate Finance

6Equity Investments

7Fixed Income

8Derivatives

9Alternative Investments

10Portfolio Management and Wealth Planning

11Economics

Microeconomics vs. MacroeconomicsDemand and Supply AnalysisMarket StructuresEconomic IndicatorsBusiness CyclesCentral Banking and Monetary PolicyFiscal PolicyInternational Trade TheoryForeign Exchange MarketsGlobal Economic Issues

12Financial Markets

13Risk Management

14Preparation and Exam Strategy

Courses/CFA Level 1/Economics

Economics

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Key economic principles affecting financial markets.

Content

1 of 10

Microeconomics vs. Macroeconomics

Micro vs Macro: Portfolio Edition (Chaotic TA Guide)
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Micro vs Macro: Portfolio Edition (Chaotic TA Guide)

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Microeconomics vs. Macroeconomics — The CFA Level I Guide That Actually Helps You Pick Stocks (and Understand Why the Fed Makes You Cry)

"Micro looks at the trees. Macro looks at the forest. Portfolio management? You need both — and sometimes a machete."


Opening: Where this fits in your CFA story

You just learned how to build portfolios, measure risk tolerance, and pick strategies that match client goals. Great — those are the how. Now you need the why behind the market weather report that changes your allocations overnight. That’s where microeconomics and macroeconomics come in.

Think of micro as the forensic accountant of individual companies and consumers; macro is the meteorologist forecasting storms (GDP crashes, inflation blizzards, central-bank heatwaves). If your investment process is a car, micro is the engine, macro is the GPS and weather app combined. You need both to avoid driving off a cliff into a bear market during a hurricane.


What they are, in plain (yet classy) CFA terms

Microeconomics — The small stuff that matters to company valuation

  • Focus: Individual consumers, firms, and markets.
  • Key concepts: Demand and supply, elasticity, cost structures, market forms (perfect competition, monopoly, oligopoly), consumer choice, production and costs.
  • Why you care as an analyst: Micro factors drive revenue, margins, competitive advantage, and ultimately firm-level cash flows — the inputs to valuation models.

Example: If a firm has pricing power (a.k.a. monopoly-ish advantages), it can sustain higher margins, which increases free cash flow and raises intrinsic value.

Code block (micro flavor):

Demand: Qd = a - bP
Supply:  Qs = c + dP
Equilibrium when Qd = Qs => P* = (a - c) / (b + d)

Macroeconomics — The big forces that move markets

  • Focus: Aggregate economic output, inflation, unemployment, interest rates, fiscal & monetary policy, exchange rates.
  • Key concepts: GDP growth, business cycles, inflation dynamics, central bank policy, yield curve, international flows.
  • Why you care as a portfolio manager: Macro variables shape the discount rate, risk-free rate, risk premia, and relative attractiveness of asset classes (stocks vs bonds, domestic vs international).

Example: Rising inflation often leads to higher nominal yields, increasing discount rates and hurting present values of future cash flows — a headwind for long-duration growth stocks.


Quick comparison table — micro vs macro (because your brain likes neat boxes)

Dimension Microeconomics Macroeconomics
Unit of analysis Firm, consumer, market National/global economy
Typical models Supply/demand, cost curves, elasticity IS-LM, AD-AS, Phillips curve, monetary policy reaction functions
Key inputs for CFA Cash flow drivers, margins, market share Interest rates, inflation, GDP growth, fiscal policy
Direct portfolio effect Stock picks, sector bets Asset allocation, risk-on/risk-off, tactical shifts

Real-world examples & how they change portfolio choices

  1. Elastic demand and pricing power (Micro → Equity selection):

    • A firm selling a niche B2B software with high switching costs has inelastic demand. It increases prices without losing many customers — margins stay strong. That improves intrinsic value — good long idea.
  2. Monetary tightening (Macro → Asset allocation):

    • The central bank hikes rates. Bonds become more attractive; discount rates rise; equity valuations compress, especially for long-duration growth names. Shift: reduce duration, prefer financials/energy over long-duration tech winners.
  3. Supply shock + sticky wages (Micro + Macro → Sector rotation):

    • Rising input costs (micro-level for manufacturers) combined with persistent inflation (macro) can squeeze margins across cyclical sectors. Defensive sectors or inflation-protected securities may outperform.
  4. Industry structure (Micro informs macro sensitivity):

    • Utilities (stable demand) are less GDP-sensitive than consumer durables. So industry micro-structure tells you how a sector reacts to macro swings.

How to use both in the Investment Management Process (practical checklist)

  1. Start top-down: assess macro regime.

    • Is it expansion, slowdown, inflationary, deflationary?
    • Check GDP growth, unemployment, inflation, central bank stance, yield curve.
  2. Move bottom-up: pick companies that fit the macro backdrop.

    • In a low-rate, growth-friendly macro: favor durable growth firms with scalable margins.
    • In rising-rate, high-inflation regimes: favor firms with pricing power, low duration cash flows, or commodity-linked earnings.
  3. Adjust portfolio construction:

    • Reweight sectors, tweak duration, size/quality tilts according to macro. Use micro to pick the best firms inside favored sectors.
  4. Stress-test with scenarios:

    • Build scenarios (stagflation, soft landing, hard landing). Evaluate firm-level cash flows under each.
  5. Communicate to clients using their risk tolerance:

    • Translate macro risks into portfolio impact (volatility, drawdown magnitude, recovery time). Align with their risk tolerance and planning needs.

Common confusions (and why people get them wrong)

  • "Macro is just noise for long-term investors." — Not true. Over decades, macro regimes set the baseline returns of asset classes (think Japan since the 1990s). Micro decisions need a macro tailwind to compound.

  • "Micro explains stocks, macro explains bonds." — Both explain both. Corporate profits (micro) plus discount rates (macro) determine equity values.

  • "If my company is great, the macro doesn’t matter." — Great companies can still get crushed when interest rates spike and valuation multiples compress — especially if earnings are far in the future.


A couple of CFA-style thought nudges (aka exam brain food)

  • How does an unexpected rise in inflation affect a firm's real cash flows vs. its nominal cash flows? What happens to its valuation if nominal discount rate increases more than nominal cash flows?

  • If the yield curve steepens, which sectors benefit and why? (Hint: banks often earn from a steeper curve.)


Closing: The takeaway you can tattoo (but don’t)

  • Micro = the "why this company" story. Macro = the "why this time" story. Both are necessary to craft portfolios that survive and thrive.

  • Use macro to set the compass (asset allocation, duration, risk appetite). Use micro to pick the passengers (securities, sectors, individual securities) who know how to steer.

"Ignore micro and you pick weak stocks. Ignore macro and you pick great stocks into a brick wall."

Go forth: build that top-down, bottom-up combo. Be the analyst who can read a balance sheet and the Fed statement with equal fury and finesse.


Version note: This piece builds on your portfolio construction and risk tolerance knowledge, adding the economic lenses you need to choose when and which bets to make.

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