The Jerome Levy Forecasting Center has a history dating back over 100 years, spanning three generations of Levy family economic analysis. Jerome Levy first developed the profits approach at the beginning of the twentieth century, and the approach is now used by his grandson David, who has accumulated a distinguished record of insights over several decades. Among other research products, the Jerome Levy Forecasting Center continues to publish The Levy Forecast®, established in 1949, America’s oldest publication devoted exclusively to forecasting and analyzing general economic and business conditions.
Levy’s work remained generally unknown to academic economists, but the profits identity was derived once again in 1935 by the Polish economist Michal Kalecki. Kalecki’s ideas about profits and business cycles influenced many of his students and associates at Cambridge University and have remained central to the studies of a minority of economists on both sides of the Atlantic.
- The financial sector, its institutions, and their interactions with the nonfinancial sectors must not be taken for granted or ignored. Events such as bank failures, crises of confidence, and speculative lending have enormous consequences for the entire economy. Balance sheets matter in macroeconomics.
- The economy adjusts to new influences not instantaneously, as conventional theory assumes, but over time, and during that time people’s attitudes and behaviors may shift, changing the nature of the economy’s adjustment.
- Contrary to the assumption of mainstream economics, every participant in the economy does not have “perfect information” or know the probabilities of all possible outcomes. Great uncertainty exists; individuals, firms, markets, and the public sector can be and often are profoundly surprised.
These three modest points shatter a central tenet of mainstream economics, that economies continually gravitate toward stable, full-employment equilibrium. Minsky achieved a much more realistic macroeconomic view by developing ways to analyze financial issues and incorporate them into a framework centered on the profits equation. He thus greatly enhanced the Profits Perspective, achieving a new way to understand and explain real-world economies’ obvious deviations from the prevailing equilibrium theory.
Minsky introduced his core ideas in the early 1960s and continued to expand them, becoming a respected but controversial figure among academics and winning enormous respect among the top Wall Street economists of the 1970s and 1980s. The Levy, Kalecki, and Minsky threads converged in 1990 when Minsky joined The Jerome Levy Economics Institute, where he remained until his death in 1996. That convergence is reflected in the work of the Jerome Levy Forecasting Center.
Today, the Jerome Levy Forecasting Center continues to produce powerful and unique analysis for its clients. Having passed a major secular turning point, the apex of what David Levy, now chairman, has dubbed the era of “the big balance sheet economy,” the financial insights from the Profits Perspective are more important than ever. Srinivas Thiruvadanthai serves as Director of Research, bringing a full mastery of the profits approach and a diverse background in finance and economics. Jay Levy followed the economy as senior counsel until his death in 2012, sharing the insights he had developed during more than six decades of maverick economic analysis and forecasting.
- 1917 to 1929: Jerome Levy uses the profits equation to successfully manage his wholesale goods business through numerous key shifts in the economy, including aggressive moves to acquire inventories in 1917, liquidate merchandise in 1920, and liquidate his business in 1929 ahead of the stock market collapse.
- Post World War II: Based on S Jay Levy’s insights from the Profits Perspective, Leon Levy goes to Wall Street with tremendous optimism about the U.S. economy’s prospects. When hiring members of Oppenheimer & Company’s research staff in the early 1950s, he makes it a rule not to hire anyone old enough to remember working during the depression because they would not be bold enough. Oppenheimer becomes a great Wall Street success story.
- Throughout the postwar era: S Jay Levy, heir to Jerome as family economist and forecaster, successfully speculates in the stock market, commodities, bonds, and interest rate futures and options, with 90% of his insights coming directly from his economic research.
- 1980s and early 1990s: Odyssey Partners (including Leon Levy, Jack Nash and others from Oppenheimer) capitalizes on major cyclical bond plays based entirely on Jay’s and his son David’s forecasts, setting firm records for profitability.
- 1991: David and Jay are serving on the Board of a not-for-profit organization financed by Leon Levy. David has been speculating in options on eurodollar futures, and Leon asks him to build and manage a $350,000 portfolio for the organization. The positions are liquidated a couple of years later with a value of over $9,000,000.
- 2003-2009: David predicts that the accelerating expansion will end with a severe financial mess and recession that will force the Fed to cut interest rates to the floor. He sets up the Levy Forecast® Fund in 2004 to capitalize on that move. The fund closed in March 2009, having produced a 500% net gain over the duration for its investors.


