"We think they are days from failure. They think it is a temporary problem. This disconnect is dangerous."
Monday, May 20, 2024
Daily Economic Update: May 21, 2024
Daily Economic Update: May 20, 2024
Mentioned in Friday's post, the recent Blanchard and Bernanke paper on the last mile of inflation seemed to advocate a very Phillip's Curve dominate mentality, that unemployment will have to rise before inflation can return to target. I thought this post from NGDP Targeting proponent Marcus Nunes, citing comments from economist George Selgin, laid out some interesting thoughts in retort to Blanchard and Bernanke. You be the judge of the merits of the arguments.
On the week ahead:
Friday, May 17, 2024
Daily Economic Update: May 17, 2024
Dow ~40K, risk assets doing well, people apparently ordering $1,000 Beef Cases in Vegas nightclubs, all against a backdrop where Fed officials stress higher for longer and as some people worry about the consumer. Macro is hard.
"There are better things to be doing than watching the ticker all day, swinging from bull to bear, obsessing over stuff no ne will remember in five years. Lester Freeman said it best on The Wire: "A life, Jimmy, you know what that is? It's what happens while you're waiting for moments that never come." - Joshua Brown (Ritholtz Wealth Management)
Speaking of The Wire, remember that last October I started every post with a quote from The Wire? Those quotes were probably contain more wisdom and value than any commentary on the most recent CPI data.
In data, which data didn't seem to matter, jobless claims were low and perhaps under-looked was the rise in import prices which seems weird given dollar strength, but I didn't investigate. Away from the data in Fedspeak Barkin said it will take more time for inflation to come back to target and Mester echoed much of the same citing the fact that the economy is strong and the Fed risk little by keeping rates higher for longer. Bernanke and Blanchard basically came out and said people need to lose jobs for inflation to come down, kind of what Powell said when he said "there will be pain" in the fight to get inflation back down.
Jamie Dimon believes there are a 'lot of inflationary forces in front of us' but that he believes the markets are failing to properly price risks to a soft landing, including that of higher rates due to higher inflation.
Dimon isn't in the business of predicting rates per se, when he does, he's often wrong, but I do believe he has a track record as a prudent risk manager. When it comes to risk management, remember, 'The price of long term stock market returns is uncertainty and volatility.' - Morgan Housel. And I think what you can learn from everyone wiser than me is what the late great Peter Bernstein said: "survival is the only road to riches. Let me say that again: Survival is the only road to riches. You should try to maximize return only if losses would not threaten your survival and if you have a compelling future need for the extra gains you might earn."
On the day ahead, it's Friday. Maybe re-read the quotes above. The leading indicators and Gov. Waller can wait.
Thursday, May 16, 2024
Daily Economic Update: May 16, 2024
CPI downside surprise allows risk assets to reach new record highs (I'm working on my poetic prowess). Taking stock of stocks S&P at 5,308 with records for Nasdaq and Dow as well. Does one CPI print coming in lower than estimate after 3 straight higher than expected prints really mark a new trend? Does it matter Powell says no hikes ever again or something like that and he’s never pivoted, right? (Remember “we’re along way from neutral” in 2018? )
Headline CPI came in at at 3.4% YoY and 0.3% MoM vs. consensus of 3.4% and 0.4%. The MoM Core reading at 0.3% v. the 0.4% est and prior seemed to be what caused the market to rejoice. Slowing primary and owners equivalent rents, declining car prices were highlighted but there still seem to be some persistent inflation in personal services, healthcare and car insurance
Retail sales were unchanged coming in below consensus and showed a decline in the control group.
Still lots of chatter expressing concerns about labor market and loan delinquencies, guess time will tell.
Yields fell 10bps with markets pricing in about 2 rate cuts, with some pulling forward their forecast for the first cut to come in July. The 2Y is 4.73% and 10Y is 4.34%.
On the day ahead it is jobless claims, housing starts, building permits, import prices, industrial production and capacity utilization on the data front and Fed's Williams as the highlight of Fedspeak.
You can start looking forward to a Presidential debate in June.
Wednesday, May 15, 2024
Daily Economic Update: May 15, 2024
CPI Day is here, the anticipation is palpable. Unless you care more about meme stocks, anything involving AI, crypto meme coins, longer term ramifications of geopolitics, tariffs, the 2024 election, sports, your family, etc. (hopefully not in that order)...this is the day you've been waiting for all week.
PPI came in hot, maybe those consumer and business inflation surveys mentioned yesterday were onto something. Headline PPI was up +0.5% MoM above the 0.3% est. with services up 0.6%. A lot of attention seems to have landed on the 3.9% increase in the cost of portfolio management. Markets going up, leads to portfolio management fees go up and that is in PPI. That gives a new sense of how/why "financial conditions" matter. Remember when the Fed said they were relying upon financial conditions tightening to do some of the work for them, has that happened? Even yesterday Powell said that he thinks about monetary policy through its "effect on financial conditions more broadly and on the economy". Judging by PPI, I guess the answer to whether financial conditions are tightening is found by asking your financial advisor, after all they are likely making more money because your assets are up.
In other Fed news, both NY Fed and STL Fed had reports out that express some concern in rising credit card delinquencies, something to add to your list of things to keep an eye on.
Powell kept the script on being data dependent as it relates to "higher for longer" and that he isn't ready to prejudge whether inflation will remain persistent going forward.
On the day ahead it's CPI, Retail Sales and moar Fedspeak.
I guess I'll get back to drawing pictures to animate and Tweet out in an effort to cause certain stocks to moon, I'll report back when complete.
XTOD: The market is beyond satire, you can’t make it up
XTOD: Here's what should be done to address inflation: cut government spending, lower overnight rates, and remove the excess liquidity that's still sitting in the RRP facility.
XTOD: I just imposed a series of tariffs on goods made in China: 25% on steel and aluminum, 50% on semiconductors, 100% on EVs, And 50% on solar panels. China is determined to dominate these industries. I'm determined to ensure America leads the world in them.
XTOD: And are lumber tariffs next? This is not the path to a healthier economy!
XTOD: Don't understand how "protecting/hiding" our companies from the global competitive reality helps America "lead." In contrast, it will make our companies weaker by limiting their fitness. It will also drive further inflation. Certainly the lobbyists in DC are happy w/ outcome.
XTOD: People talking abt election odds should be paying attention to the fact that the (actuarial) probability of at least one of the 2 main presidential candidate dying over the next year is ~12%**plus or minus adjustment for current health.
Tuesday, May 14, 2024
Daily Economic Update: May 14, 2024
Aside from the fun times with GameStop meme trading as "Roaring Kitty" resurfaced on X for the first time in 3 years, it was a pretty quiet market days with all eyes towards inflation data with PPI today and CPI on Wednesday. If you're curious about GameStop, Andrew Tate (I thought he was in jail) vowed to never sell the GameStop shares he bought today, no matter what, "PERMA DONATIONS TO THE CAUSE AGAINST THE SYSTEM". I'm not sure exactly what that means, but time to revisit my post from January on finfluencers and civilization https://edwardquince.blogspot.com/2024/01/daily-economic-update-january-29-2024.html
Yesterday's NY Fed Survey of Consumer Expectations showed increasing median inflation expectations at both the 1Y and 5Y ahead horizons to 3.3% and 2.8% respectively. Consumers also showed confidence in their job prospects. Separately the Cleveland Fed's Survey of Firms Inflation Expectations also showed CEO's and executives raising their 1Y ahead inflation expectations, in this case up to 3.8% from 3.4% back in January. Inflation is so under control that everyone thinks it's not under control, crazy reverse, psyops I'm sure.
If trading meme stocks and inflation data isn't your thing feel free to join the discussion over bat speed and swing length.
On the day ahead it's PPI at 830am and Powell at 10am as the highlights.
Monday, May 13, 2024
Daily Economic Update: May 13, 2024
Last week was a good week for equities, despite Friday's UofM report showing further concerns about inflation with rising year ahead inflation expectations (likely due to gas prices). Speaking of inflation, on the week ahead it's all about CPI. The internet and fintwit was ablaze with creating a CPI coffee controversy, with the BLS supposedly removing coffee from the CPI. The story was based on this https://www.bls.gov/cpi/additional-resources/discontinued-series.htm however all indications that coffee is very much still in CPI and is an incredibly small component.
Anyway, we'll see what CPI brings unless something else comes along to change the narrative. Lest we forget about two wars, including an apparent assassination attempt against Zelensky in Ukraine. Or the Kendrick Lamar v. Drake beef for that matter (apparently the Biden campaign used Lamar's diss track "Euphoria" in a campaign video and Lamar's "Not Like Us" broke a Spotify streaming record to become the most streamed American hip-hip song in a single-day with 6.59 million).
If you're not into following Kendrick vs. Drake diss tracks, you could read the latest posts from John Cochrane's Substack called "Fiscal Tidbits". As a starting point, remember, "Fiscal theory does not say that deficits cause inflation. It only says that the fraction of deficit people do not expect to be paid back, either by higher future surplus or by lower future interest costs, is inflationary." In the first post there is an interesting thought on how at higher levels of debt, deficits have a lower impact on inflation.
"surpluses relative to debt drive inflation. Given deficits and expected surpluses, more debt means less inflation. Your intuition about debt being bad is also correct, because it typically means it will be harder for a country to promise future surpluses to pay off deficits. Beware in reading history, or judging whether more debt makes inflation more likely, just what is actually held constant and what is not".....
"The interest cost is important. 1% interest rate means 1% of GDP primary deficit at 100% debt to GDP. It means 2.5% primary deficit at 250% debt to GDP. That’s a reason that, contrary to last point, more debt means more inflation danger. It means more exposure to interest rate changes."
Taking stock we have 2Y yield at 4.87% and 10Y at 4.50%. The last Atlanta Fed GDP Now is at 4.2% vs. 2.23% for the NY Fed GDP Nowcast and the Cleveland Fed Inflation Nowcasting has inflation still running above target.
Friday, May 10, 2024
Daily Economic Update: May 10, 2024
As expected the BoE was on hold, though confidence in rate cuts coming as soon as June increased. In the U.S. jobless claims seemed to get the message that people (see Jim Bianco here) were concerned that the data was manipulated after many prints at 212K in the data set, so this time they spiked up to 231K. The 30Y Auction was strong, easing concerns about market demand for longer-term debt (for today at least). Yields moved lower and stocks moved higher, but I'm not sure anyone cares much until next week's CPI data. 2Y is around 4.80% and 10's are around 4.45%.
On the day ahead, UofM sentiment is the highlight. Markets will continue to watch the situation in Gaza and the possibility that the U.S. will cut off certain weapons shipments if Israel invades Rafah.
XTOD: "Girard’s theory of mimetic desire describes our fundamental compulsion to want what others want or have. 'We don’t even know what our desire is. We ask other people to tell us our desires'...'you desire stuff exclusively because other people desire it.'"
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