Where The Fed Sits In One Chart (Taylor Rule Hints At Target Rate Being 8.80% Instead Of 0.25%)

With The Federal Reserve leaving its target rate at 0.25%, but hinting at a tapering (slowdown) of asset purchases, I thought it would be good to present where The Fed sits at the moment.

You can see the rise in the effective Fed Funds rate from 2016 to early 2020, then KABOOM! COVID struck, the effective Fed Funds rate crashed while The Fed dramatically increased their purchases of Treasuries and Agency MBS. Both Treasury and Agency MBS purchases are projected to decline by mid-2022. The Fed’s target rate (purple line) is project to rise to 1% after 2023.

Where SHOULD The Fed Funds Target rate be? How about 8.80% instead of 0.25%.

So we still have over-stimulypto with The Fed projected to raise rates at a snail’s pace.

Face it, Wall Street wants interest rates low, even if inflation burns out of control.

Stimulypto! 10-year REAL Treasury Yield Is -3.9364% And REAL 30-year Mortgage Rate Is -2.30%!

Yes, the US economy has been greatly overstimulated by the Federal government (fiscal stimulus) and The Federal Reserve (monetary stimulus). This has caused inflation that we haven’t seen in a long time.

How overstimulated in the economy? The REAL 10-year Treasury yield (nominal less CPI YoY) is now -3.9364% and the 30-year REAL mortgage rate is -2.30%.

When will Federal stimulypto end?

Ethereum Is A Runaway Train! $4,358 Versus $129 On April 1, 2020 When COVID And The Fed Struck

Cryptocurrencies are a runaway train. In particular, Ethereum has gone from $129 on April 1, 2020 to $4,358 today.

Yes. March 2020 is when Covid struck and The Federal Reserve counterattacked.

Has volatility increased for the cryptos? Of course. The skew to the upside is steep on Bitcoin.

US Labor Productivity Output Plunges To Carter-era Stagnation Levels As Unit Labor Costs Soar

The last time we saw US labor productivity out per hour this low was in 1981 when President Reagan inherited stagflation from President Jimmy Carter.

As unit labor costs soar +8.3%.

Any wonder that the 1% have been doing so well relative to the bottom 50% in terms of wealth since entrance of The Fed in 2008 with zero-interest rate policies (ZIRP) and assets purchases (QE). And also after Covid struck.

“That will be $10,000 for your Big Mac, fries and a soda, please!”

COVID And The CMBX Cliff (Retail and Office Sectors Still Limping Along Thanks To Shutdowns And Fearmongering)

Nothing has been the same since Covid struck in early 2020.

CMBX BBB-, the reference basket for CMBS 6, was climbing to around $95 prior to the Covid outbreak and resulting recession. The CMBX reference basket is now at $72.25.

CMBX 6 is largely composed of retail and office, both hit hard by Covid and the ensuing lockdowns and fearmongering by the Federal government and main street media.

What To Expect Today From The Fed Open Market Committee (No Rate Change, Slight Decrease In Asset Purchases As M2 Money Velocity Collapses And Real Hourly Earnings Growth Is Negative)

From The Land of 1,000 Excuses, The Federal Reserve Open Market Committee (FOMC) will announce … no rate increases and a slight reduction in their assets purchases (Treasuries and Agency MBS). The announcement will be at 2pm EST (not at The Midnight Hour).

The Federal Open Market Committee is all but certain to hold rates near zero after a two-day policy meeting and announce a $15 billion monthly reduction in bond buying from the current $120 billion pace, judging that the test for tapering has been met as the economy heals from Covid-19.

There are two rate increases baked into the Fed Funds futures data as of today.

But a troubling aspect of The Fed’s monetary policy is that M2 Money Velocity is near the lowest in history and The Fed has been binge printing. What this means is that money printing has had little impact on GDP growth.

When The Fed mentions the post-COVID recovery, I hope they mention that REAL hourly wage growth is NEGATIVE.

And REAL S&P 500 earnings yield is also negative.

The Fed will likely to blame TRANSITORY effects such as the backed-up port traffic in Long Beach for rising prices rather than their flooding the markets with too much money.

But The Fed will continue to print, even though they will blame bottlenecks for inflation rather than their haphazard drowning of the economy in money.

Given that The Fed is monetizing the reckless spending by The Federal government, particularly Pelosi’s latest budget, we will see coordination between Chairman Powell and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen (aka, Mustang Sally).

Call Jerome at 634-5789 to tell him to raise rate to normal levels.

Escape From LA II? Corelogic Home Price Index UP 18% YoY, But Forecast To Slow To 1.9% YoY In 2022

Yes, home prices are still growing at a super-hot pace of 18%, according to Corelogic.

But the forecast for home price growth is for 1.9% YoY in 2022.

As home price growth crashes back to earth as wages don’t keep pace with home prices.

Home prices have been growing in most states out west where The Fed’s money pump has resulted in a boom in second homes and people escaping high tax California and Oregon for Nevada, Idaho, Arizona (again), Utah and Montana. The east coast is seeing the Carolinas booming along with Florida and Indiana. Escape from New York?

Escape from LA … to Arizona, Nevada, Idaho and Utah?

Taylor Rule Implies Fed’s Target Rate Should Be 8.52%, Not 0.25%

As we approach another Fed Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting (November 3rd), it is time to look at the Taylor Rule, created by Stanford economist John Taylor to help everyone understand what The Fed is likely to do. Unfortunately, The Fed doesn’t do what expected.

For example, look at the Taylor Rule using Greg Mankiw’s specification. It says The Fed Funds Target Rate should be 8.52%, not the lowly 0.25% it is today.

That is a big gap between where The Taylor Rule says we should be and where Powell and the FOMC is.

Will The Fed raise their target rate on November 3rd? Or at least start slowing the balance sheet?

Agita! Treasury Secretary Yellen Expresses Openness to Defusing Debt Ceiling Without GOP Votes (CDS At $15.97, So No One Is Really Worried, Janet!)

Somewhere over the Alps, T-Sec Janet Yellen is fearmongering over a possible US debt default if Republicans don’t kowtow to Democrat’s desires to raise the debt ceiling.

(Washington ComPost) — SOMEWHERE OVER THE ALPS — Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Sunday said Democrats should be willing to approve a fix to the nation’s debt ceiling without GOP support if necessary, an approach senior Democrats ruled out during a recent standoff over the issue.

In an interview aboard a government airplane between Rome and Dublin, Yellen castigated Republicans for refusing to help raise the debt limit but acknowledged Democrats may be able to address the issue without GOP support through the Senate budget procedure known as reconciliation.

Senior Democratic leaders were adamant that the debt ceiling be resolved on a bipartisan basis last month. Senate Republicans have uniformly insisted that Democrats should alone be responsible for raising the nation’s debt limit. Congress probably will face a deadline of Dec. 3 to act, though the exact date is uncertain.

Well, Janet, the market (Credit Default Swaps for US) doesn’t seem to be worried about raising the debt ceiling.

Likewise, the CDX 5Y IG for the US investment grade corporate bonds is near historic lows. Even Yellen can’t make that rise.

The yield curve is flattening as The Fed gets ready to taper.

Only a career academic and politico Bambina like Janet Yellen would try to drum up agita about a US debt default when Democrats can cram down most anything through “budget reconciliation.”

Just relax Janet, put on some headphones, and listen to Redd Volkaert instead of your habit of fearmongering.

Ethereum Jumps to Record High As People Lose Faith In Central Banks To Control Inflation

Instead of Bonjovi singing “Keeping the faith,” they should sing “Losing the faith” with regard to central banks and inflation.

Ethererum, the cryptocurrency, is now at $4,298. It under $200 as the Covid crisis took shape in March 2020. Since Covid, The Federal Reserve went loco and massively increased their money supply and asset purchases. With that response (and economic bottlenecks), inflation has increased to 5.4% YoY.

The Fed’s new moto should be “Policy errors ARE our business!”

No, we don’t look to President Beavis to do much of anything positive about inflation.