$29 dongles, an attempt to impeach Biden, MGM casino cyber attack, covid, UK GDP contracting, but it's CPI that is in focus today. At the last FOMC meeting, the Fed had identified five pieces of economic data that would inform their upcoming decision, those were: the Employment Cost Index back on July 28, the two Jobs reports (8/4 and 9/1) and the two CPI reports (8/10 and today's upcoming report), most commentators and the market believe those reports, which have shown some slowing in labor data and cooling inflation, will likely leave the Fed on pause next week (CME FedWatch has probability of a pause at 93%), but we'll see what happens with today's CPI. To start the day, the 2Y is up 3bps to 5.03% and the 10Y is higher by 3-4bps to 4.31%. On the cap we get CPI and the 30Y Bond Auction. If you're looking for bank forecast for the inflation read you can find them here.
If you missed it yesterday, Howard Mark's put out his most recent memo. As is typical of Howard's memo's, it's worth a read. He spends some time using tennis as an analogy, harkening back to Charlie Ellis' classic "The Loser's Game" in which Ellis argues that argues that lay investors have the best chance of success in investing in the stock market by avoiding costly mistakes, minimizing cost and focusing on asset allocation and passive investing. Mark's states: "The amateur doesn’t have to hit winners to win, and that’s a good thing, because he or she generally is incapable of doing so dependably."
As we look ahead today's inflation reading, it's always "fun" to reflect on inflation, so here's a few gem's from Irving Fisher's classic "The Money Illusion":
- "Money Illusion"; that is the failure to perceive that the dollar, or any other unit of money, expands or shrinks in value.
- "As long as a dollar is not safe, any agreement to pay a dollar is not safe. However certain it may be that you are going to get the promised dollar, it is not at all sure what the dollar is going to be worth when you get it."
- "In short if more money pays for the same goods their price must rise, just as if more butter is spread over the same slice of bread it must be spread thicker, the thickness represents the price level, the bread the quantity of goods."
- "..the only important fact, in so far as the price level is concerned, is the relation between these two circulations [money and goods]...if the circulation of money increases relatively to the circulation of goods, the price level will rise. If, on the contrary, it decreases relatively, the price level will fall; that is, whether the butter is thick or thin depends on whether there is much or little butter relative to the bread."
- "War has always been by far the greatest expander of paper money and credit, and therefore the cause of the greatest price upheavals in history."
- "[Inflation] It would, indeed, be of no importance if everybody's income were adjusted to the change in prices. But this is not and cannot be the case...a change in the money yardstick, the dollar, is far more serious, and for three reasons:
- it affects all sales
- it is used for long-term contracts...we are constantly contracting to pay present dollars for future dollars...it makes tremendous difference, for instance, to a bond holder.
- these disasterous effects are not perceived because of money illusion
- "when your house is burglarized, society is none the poorer..that would be cold comfort to you..in somewhat the same sense this burglarizing dollar is defrauding people...it is social injustice."
- "while inflation is going on, the general public finds it hard to admit that there can be too much money....After rapid inflation once starts, the clamor for more money often grows louder and louder."
- "When prices are rising wages and salaries are, as it were, running after a lost train."
- "Business is always injured by uncertainty. Uncertainty paralyzes effort, and uncertainty in the purchasing power of the dollar is the worst of all business uncertainties."
- "As inflation goes on, the workers continually grow more dissatisfied and attribute their plight to an intentional plundering by a social system of exploitation." "Out of such discontent, therefore came Bolshevism and other radical theories."
- "worst examples of inflation have come from unbalanced government budgets. As we have seen, when a government cannot make both ends meet, it pays its bills by manufacturing the money needed."
XTOD: A picture of inflation as a tax on the average family: https://bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-09-12/us-inflation-adjusted-incomes-fell-2-3-in-2022-from-prior-year?srnd=undefined#xj4y7vzkg
XTOD: Every Twitter economist is saying the same brain dead, out of touch thing…“Why are the American people so negative on the economy? GDP is up!” Maybe because they just watched their purchasing power be annihilated by generational inflation, real household incomes have fallen for 3 years in a row and wealth inequality continues to expand. All while their tax dollars are being wasted and/or sent overseas. GDP doesn’t come up at the kitchen table for normal Americans you clowns.
“Honey… the credit card bill is due and we don’t have enough to cover it this month. Our groceries have doubled and student loans are restarting soon. There’s also a possibility of layoffs coming at work.” “Oh don’t worry about that. GDP is trending stronger than expected!”
XTOD: Today we broke the record for the longest streak of trading days (210) with an inverted 10yr/3mth yield curve. What that means, you be the judge...
XTOD: "We don't have enough Americans to afford what is going on out there right now." Housing Market Set For A "Cat 5" Storm, Worse Than The Great Financial Crisis.
XTOD: Let me make one thing clear on @IRSnews ERC. Small business owners who qualified rightly claimed this. GOOD. Law was designed FOR THEM. Years later, most new claimants are being SOLD the ERC for 25-30% commission. Most new claims are fraud. Danny Werfel knows it. Good for him!
XTOD: Don't believe me? Since 1983, whenever entitlement spending pushed deficits too high, Congress responded by cutting defense and social spending (education, veterans, kids), and raising middle-class taxes. And it will get much worse.
XTOD: A CDC advisory panel met to come up with a recommendation on whether updated COVID shots approved by the government should be used broadly or targeted to specific at-risk populations, setting the stage for the launch of a re-vaccination campaign
XTOD: Government: "OK so there's a pandemic, but don't worry we're going to let you not make payments for 3 years."
Borrowers: "OK cool, I'm going to buy a house with that money."
G: "Wait no, that's not what we said..."
B: "OK I also bought a new car"
G: "Wait stop, that's not how this works."
B: "We're in Europe on vacation, AirBnB does Klarna now."
G: "......"
https://x.com/lisaabramowicz1/status/1701629776983658983?s=20
https://x.com/Stephen_Geiger/status/1701682668859986046?s=20
https://x.com/bespokeinvest/status/1701679908609536503?s=20
https://x.com/CT_Osprey/status/1701643867383087136?s=20
https://x.com/DiMartinoBooth/status/1701683144079142915?s=20
https://x.com/Brian_Riedl/status/1701664085291487593?s=20
https://x.com/Reuters/status/1701681858252017972?s=20
https://x.com/GRomePow/status/1701362998450012436?s=20
CPI in line per MNI: US AUG CPI 0.6%, CORE 0.3%; CPI Y/Y 3.7%, CORE Y/Y 4.3%
ReplyDeleteAs rising gas prices filter through into headline inflation
yields little changed, fading the initial move higher:
@jeannasmialek
CPI for August: Enough keep Fed officials wary, not enough to make them freak out.
This is the last big data point before the Sept. 20 meeting.
- 3.7% increase YoY, v 3.6% expected
- 4.3% excluding food and gas, in line with expectation
- 0.3% monthly core, v 0.2% expected