housing market

“Grub first, then ethics.”

The Democratic Party lost the election because of deteriorating economic conditions. The majority of voters are not better off than they were four years ago.
The electorate understood that policies implemented by the previous administration were slowing growth and inflating the economy. Voters knew their personal economic prospects were deteriorating and that increased indebtedness, aggressive government spending, and the money printed to pay for it were the cause of their livelihoods’ destruction. They also knew that another four years of the same policies would inevitably result in higher taxation.

“Grub first, then ethics.” Read More »

“The greatest threat facing humanity is a radical Islamist regime meeting up with nuclear weapons.”

The S&P 500 traded to yet another all-time high last week: $5,878. The benchmark closed Friday at $5,865, up 0.9% on the week, while the Dow rose 1%, and the NASDAQ was up 0.8%. The U.S. equity market performance marked the 6th straight week of gains––the longest winning streak of the year.
This should surprise no one. This is an unsurpassed, debt-fueled, inflationary growth cycle.
Gold, too, is at another all-time high ($2,749.)
70% of S&P 500 companies reported earnings, and 75% beat expectations, which (truthfully) were marked down over the last month––so, essentially, coming in close to expectations (+6%).
Treasury yields continue to climb and have done so since Powell cut the Fed funds rate on September 18th. This confirms that the financial system, the economy, and markets do not require more stimulus at a time when debt and deficits, along with robust consumer spending and a growing labor force, are providing ample liquidity. 10y Treasuries were bought at 3.595% the day before (3.595%) and have risen to 4.217%. That’s a yield increase of +0.62%.

“The greatest threat facing humanity is a radical Islamist regime meeting up with nuclear weapons.” Read More »

“Neither a state nor a bank ever [has] had the unrestricted power of issuing paper money without abusing that power.”

Stocks rallied smartly last week. The Dow was up 2.6%, The S&P 500 rallied 4.0%, and the Nasdaq jumped 6.0%.
Growth stocks outpaced value shares by a wide margin. The big-cap mega-scalers led the rally, and the poster child for the AI revolution was the clear winner as rallied 16%!
Don’t get too excited, though; the broad market (S&P 500) remains within its range since April. The S&P 500 is marginally
(-0.50%) below, the Nasdaq is -5% below, and the Dow is -17.56% below all-time highs. Markets are skittish and fearful of change.

“Neither a state nor a bank ever [has] had the unrestricted power of issuing paper money without abusing that power.” Read More »

“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 »

“The source of the rise in the U.S. unemployment rate is not job cuts but a rise in labor supply”

The partial unwind of the Yen carry trade unleashed so much volatility that the Bank of Japan promised no further rate hikes during times of market turbulence. The Dollar has collapsed against the Yen. The BOJ’s intention was to support the Yen, but the Dollar collapse is really about U.S. debt and deficits.

“The source of the rise in the U.S. unemployment rate is not job cuts but a rise in labor supply” 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 »

“It would be premature to conclude with confidence that we have achieved a sufficiently restrictive stance…”

Key economic reports in the upcoming week are various and reasonably important, but Friday’s employment report is the only one that really matters. The Fed’s game plan was to raise interest rates enough to reduce the imbalance in the labor market. But the tightening is really quite marginal compared to the continued stimulus, and it is that stimulus that has been supportive of higher equity valuations and growth. I think the stock market sees this. What it fails to see — for now — is that the stimulus is supporting higher prices.

“It would be premature to conclude with confidence that we have achieved a sufficiently restrictive stance…” Read More »