Russell 2000

“Bringing inflation down to the Fed’s 2% goal while maintaining a healthy labor market is the number…”

The rising sentiment towards a Fed rate cut seems premature—even for September 18th. Financial conditions are easier than they have been in two years. The S&P 500 is still up by 14.5% for the year (just below the Nasdaq’s 2024 return of 15.6%), but it sure doesn’t feel like it, even though it remains well above average returns over the last 15 years.

“Bringing inflation down to the Fed’s 2% goal while maintaining a healthy labor market is the number…” Read More »

“The ancient art of deception is to present two lies and get the people arguing viciously about which is true.”

When the Fed finally started raising interest rates in March 2022, Mr. Powell reminded investors that the Fed’s primary objectives were full employment and stable prices. The Fed is now as close as it has been to achieving those objectives since the pandemic.
A balanced and patient Fed has been a stabilizing force in a chaotic world. Global GDP is rising, and headline inflation pressures in most countries appear to be abating. Perhaps the Fed’s duel mandate is on the verge of being realized.
Mr. Powell’s Fed last hiked rates in July 2023, yet the economy appears to be slowing more quickly now than it has since the Fed paused. Indeed, reporting to Congress last week, Mr. Powell sounded even more dovish than he did at the G7 confab 10 days ago. He seems convinced the Fed is succeeding in reducing inflation and is on track to reach its target objective of 2%. Maybe he’s right.

“The ancient art of deception is to present two lies and get the people arguing viciously about which is true.” Read More »

“If the Lord Almighty came down and said, ‘Joe, get out of the race,’ I’d get out. But He’s not coming down.”

Being an economic thinker rather than a political one, I will say that all these elections seem to have one thing in common—voters are rejecting the status quo of imposed statism. They are rejecting the policies of excessive indebtedness and deficit sending. Voters know first-hand that slow growth and higher prices are pushing them further and further behind in their quality of life. The famous “misery index” is rising everywhere from Beijing to Tehran, Moscow to Paris, Berlin to London, and Washington. Most major countries across the world are in danger of debt death spirals. Voters everywhere know government bureaucrats are asking them to sacrifice more than they can bear. They want change.

“If the Lord Almighty came down and said, ‘Joe, get out of the race,’ I’d get out. But He’s not coming down.” Read More »