Commodities

“He who awaits much can expect little.”

The Big Story of the Week was Powell’s speech in Jackson Hole. The Chairman’s message was clear: The Fed’s focus has shifted exclusively in the direction of U.S. Employment. Inflation will be allowed to run hot–especially in services and shelter.
There was little doubt that more stimulus was coming. Powell has signaled for months that he wants to stimulate—all he needed was supporting evidence. He got it. The BLS revised its new job calculations (Reducing the new jobs created in the year by over 800,000), which now indicate that employment growth was 30% lower than previously advertised.

“He who awaits much can expect little.” Read More »

“Mr. Biden and his party have been given the chance to avoid a dire fate for their country and the world. They should seize it.”

The S&P 500 once again touched an all-time high (5,523) but closed on a down note for two reasons. First, inflation remains persistent. The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge (PCE) showed prices are still rising substantially more than they were pre-pandemic (+2.6% vs +1.3%.) The key (outside-down-day) reversal lower insured that for the 9th. straight day, the U.S. equity index failed to close above the psychologically important 5,500 level. Second, Biden’s Presidential term is likely finished. The damaging and likely permanent fallout from the debate is devastating. More on that below.

“Mr. Biden and his party have been given the chance to avoid a dire fate for their country and the world. They should seize it.” Read More »

“By all means, let’s be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our brains drop out.”

The Fed Won’t Cut Rates This Year. Most economists think they should. (Of course, they do! Most of them work for the government or on Wall Street.) But let’s face it, as calculated by the government, inflation for the average household is up 25% since it started rising in 2021. However, for most households, it feels much higher. The point is that inflation is not going to go down. The Fed doesn’t even want it to! Core PCE is rising at 3.5%, and it’s expected to rise to 4% by the election. The Fed’s stated target is +2%; inflation would have to be negative for a prolonged period to bring any relief to the average household.

“By all means, let’s be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our brains drop out.” Read More »

“There is an inevitable divergence, attributed to the imperfections of the human mind, between the world as it is and the world as men perceive it.”

Stimulus remains ample, and Mr. Powell was more dovish than even the most strident risk asset bulls anticipated. Government activism in the economy and capital market and economy remain and are accelerating.
The performance of the U.S. equity and credit markets is excellent, and they are aggressively testing the Fed, which doesn’t see the threat unless, of course, they see something that we don’t. Three cuts are still expected in 2024. Stocks should remain encouraged but for how long?

“There is an inevitable divergence, attributed to the imperfections of the human mind, between the world as it is and the world as men perceive it.” Read More »

“I thought by now you’d realize, there ain’t no way to hide your lyin’ eyes.”

Stagflation reigns. Slow growth (2.5%) with rising inflation (4%) — driven by the rising cost of labor (+5%) — is the very definition of a stagflating economy. This forecast remains the dominant theme for the economy, markets, and investors. Stagflation has been the Perry International Capital Partners (PICP) forecast for two years, and we continue to be more worried about rising inflation than we are about slower growth.

“I thought by now you’d realize, there ain’t no way to hide your lyin’ eyes.” Read More »

“Everything we hear is an opinion, not a fact. Everything we see is a perspective, not the truth.”

Economic data continues to surprise to the upside; the Citi surprise index was up again from last week (44.10 vs 39.0) and the January lows (0). It is above pre-pandemic levels, and the labor market is stronger, too. Unemployment is 3.7%, with claims falling and the number of available jobs rising.

“Everything we hear is an opinion, not a fact. Everything we see is a perspective, not the truth.” Read More »