The Biden Blitzkrieg Bop! 10 Red Flags Point To Looming Recession Under Bidenomics

Call Bidenomics a new name: The Biden Blitzkrieg Bop since the administration launched a blitzkrieg attack on America’s middle class and low wage workers through bad energy policies and soaring inflation.

Economists have practically sounded the all-clear on a looming recession, but plenty of signs are still flashing red.

Clearly, economists were wrong earlier this year when they forecast an economic contraction that has yet to manifest. Could they be wrong now?

To be sure, economic growth, the labor market and consumer spending have proven unexpectedly resilient in the face of rising interest rates and elevated inflation. But there are still plenty of signs a recession might still be on its way.

1. An “uncertain outlook” from leading indicators

Many mainstay economic indicators measure the past. So-called leading indicators reflect what likely lies ahead.

The Conference Board’s U.S. Leading Economic Index for July marked its 16th consecutive drop and its longest losing streak since the run-up to the Great Recession in 2007 and 2008.

“The outlook remains highly uncertain,” said Justyna Zabinska-La Monica, senior manager of business cycle indicators, at The Conference Board.

“The leading index continues to suggest that economic activity is likely to decelerate and descend into mild contraction in the months ahead.”

The index is based on 10 components, ranging from stock prices and interest rates to unemployment claims and consumer expectations for business conditions.

2. Consumer confidence is just a hair above recessionary levels

The Conference Board’s consumer confidence index came in at 80.2 in August, hovering just above 80, the level that often signals the U.S. economy is headed for a recession in the coming year.

It is also a leading indicator used to predict consumer spending, which drives more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity.

3. Consumers are foregoing big-ticket purchases

Retailers report that their customers have shifted their purchasing habits, spending less on furniture and other big ticket items in favor of necessities.  They have also been trading down on grocery items, ditching pricier cuts of beef and buying chicken.

“We saw some switch even to some canned products, like canned chicken and canned tuna and things like that,” Costco’s Chief Financial Officer Richard Galanti told analysts on a May conference call.

Consumer spending has remained one of the bright spots in the economy, but most investors expect consumer spending to slow by as early as next year, Bloomberg’s latest Markets Live Pulse survey found.

4. Credit cards are getting maxed out

U.S. consumers ran up their credit card debt past the $1 trillion mark for the first time last month, according to a report on household debt from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

Total household debt, which includes home and auto loans, has eclipsed $17 trillion.

The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis reports that credit card delinquencies, which are still low compared to periods such as the Great Financial Crisis, are on the rise.

5. Banks are increasingly reluctant to lend

The latest Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey by the Federal Reserve reports tightening credit conditions across the board, from business loans to home mortgages and consumer credit.

“Regarding banks’ outlook for the second half of 2023, banks reported expecting to further tighten standards on all loan categories,” the Fed survey concluded.

“Banks most frequently cited a less favorable or more uncertain economic outlook and expected deterioration in collateral values and the credit quality of loans as reasons for expecting to tighten lending standards further.”

When banks pull back on lending, businesses curb their investments and consumers cut spending, and this trend is expected to continue for at least the rest of the year.

6. Corporate bonds are maturing and refinancing them will be costly

Goldman Sachs estimates that $1.8 trillion in corporate debt is coming due over the next two years and it will have to be refinanced at higher interest rates.

The expense will eat up more corporate resources, possibly leading to slower growth and investment.

Recessions occur as debt levels peak and borrowers begin to default.

Moody’s has already reported a surge in corporate defaults this year. In the first half of the year, it counted 55, that’s 53% more than the 36 that defaulted in all of 2022.

7. Manufacturing remains in a prolonged post-pandemic slump

Manufacturing has been in decline for 10 consecutive months, as measured by the ISM Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index.

Respondents to the ISM survey reported weaker customer demand because of higher prices and interest rates.

Orders are in fact falling faster than factories are cutting output, suggesting firms will need to continue scaling back their production volumes into the near future,” writes Chris Williamson, chief business economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence. 

“An increasing sense of gloom about the near-term outlook has meanwhile hit hiring and led to a further major pull-back in purchasing activity.”

8. ‘Cascading crises’ could tip the balance of a slowing global economy

China, a growth engine for the past 40 years, is still struggling to recover from the pandemic, global economic growth has fallen below long-term average, and the ailing world could pull the U.S. economy down with it. 

Like a plane crash, every economic disaster stems from a confluence of mishaps. Along these lines, G20 nations on Saturday put out a dire warning:

“Cascading crises have posed challenges to long-term growth,” the group said.

“With notable tightening in global financial conditions, which could worsen debt vulnerabilities, persistent inflation and geoeconomic tensions, the balance of risks remains tilted to the downside.”

9. The yield curve, a classic recessionary signal, is still inverted

Investors should be paid more for taking a long-term risk than they should for a short-term risk. That’s why the yield on a 10-year Treasury is supposed to pay a higher yield than a 2-year Treasury.

When this is not the case, it’s called an inverted yield curve, and it has long been considered a sign that a recession is due within the next 18 months.

The yield curve for 10-year and the 2-year Treasury has been inverted since July 2022. It’s been inverted for so long that many observers have given up on its reliability — though it still hasn’t been 18 months since it first inverted.

As for history, the yield curve last inverted was in late 2019, just before the pandemic U.S. recession.

10. Inflation is sticky, and the Fed isn’t done

The soft landing scenario that is  so widely embraced is based on observations that inflation has dropped precipitously as the economy continues to grow at a healthy pace and the labor market is still  holding strong with the unemployment rate at 3.8%

The Fed, which has raised interest rates 11 times since March 2022 to curb inflation, can now take a bow. The consumer price index, which measures inflation, has come down from a peak of over 9% in June 2022 to 3.2% on its last reading in July.

The latest reading on CPI, for August, came out Wednesday, and re-accelerated more than expected, with The Fed’s most-watched ‘Core Services CPI Ex-Shelter’ back above 4.00%…

Meanwhile, the Fed, which next meets on Sept. 19-20 to decide on interest rates, is holding fast to its 2% target for inflation and will keep rates higher for longer, or possibly even raise them further to meet that goal.

Wall Street traders are not expecting another increase this month, according to the CME FedWatch tool, which is based on Fed funds futures trading.

Policy makers are still waiting to see what happens next after raising rates to their highest level in 22 years. Perhaps those actions have already sent the economy on a path of contraction. Or perhaps they haven’t done enough to continue slowing inflation.

Sticky inflation presents on ongoing risk of a recession.

“I believe we must proceed gradually,” Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan said last week, “weighing the risk that inflation will be too high against the risk of dampening the economy too much.”

The Biden Blitzkrieg Bop!

Shape Of Things! US Loan And Leases Growth Slowing With Crash In M2 Money Growth As Loan Delinquencies Accelerate

Shape of things in the US economy. But a better tune to descible what is happening is over, under, sideways down.

For example, look at this chart of loans and leases at commercial banks, since last year (YoY). The growth rate is plunging rapidly. Of course, M2 Money growth has already crashed.

Loan delinquenices? The trend in delinquencies is rising as consumers struggle with inflation.

When asked about future Fed policies, Powell angrily replied “I’m a man.” Just kidding, but that is almost as nonsensical as his other answers.

Bits And Pieces: US Real Median Income Falls By -2.3%, Worst Decline Since 2010, Core Inflation (CPI) At 13% YoY (Fed Likely To Raise Rates)

Here are some bits and pieces about the US economy and interest rates.

The Federal Reserve, the most powerful Socialist machine on the planet, is considering rate their target rate after some bad economic news.

First, real median household income (released yesterday for 2022) showed a decline of -2.3%. That is the worst decline 2010 when Biden was Vice-president. Notice that real median household income has never been positive under Biden (I doubt if PressSec Jean Pierre will brag about this!)

Then we have today’s BLS inflation report. The highlight? Core inflation is at 13% YoY.

Here is a colorful Bloomberg chart of inflation.

Apparently, The Fed has more work to do!

Fed Chair Powell gestures about inflation still being too high (although dim bulb “economist” AOC claimed that inflation is just propaganda).

US Credit Default Swaps Price Now Above Spain As US Debt Gets Close To $33 TRILLION And $194 TRILLION In Unfunded Federal Promises (Joy To The Globalist Elites!)

I ain’t never been to Spain, but the US under Biden is like Spain in terms of default risk.

Actually, I have to Spain numerous times and love visiting Barcelona. But the US debt fiasco under Biden and Congressional spending sprees has led to … US credit default swap being priced worse than Spain’s CDS.

With Biden/Congress orgy of spending (and a declining economy in many important respects), the US is seeing Federal debt near $33 TRILLION and even worse, unfunded Federal liabilities (promises, promises) are at $193 TRILLION, almost 6 times the current Federal debt load.

If you are into archaelogy and fossils, Nancy Pelosi (83) has announced that she is running for re-election to The House. Hasn’t San Francisco suffered enough under Feinstein, Newsom and Mayor Breed?

Or as 3 Dog Night sang, “Joy to the globalist elites!”

US Mortgage Rates Remain Above 7% (UP 158% Under Biden) As 10Y-2Y Treasury Curve Remains Inverted Since July 4th, 2023 (Food CPI UP 19% Under Lunchbox Joe And Gasoline UP 69% Under Green Joe)

It is a day of rememberance for the tragedy of the 9/11 terrorist attacks in New York City, while Biden embarrasses himself in Vietnam in a rambling speech which his aides cut off mid-sentence. Oh and he used his “lying dog-faced pony soldier” line again about global warning, ignoring the massive growth in coal useage in nearby China. Is this Bozo Joe?

But back in the USA (while Biden does his humiliate the US tour of Vietnam, India, etc, and ignores the tragedy of the 9/11 attacks), we see mortgage rates still up above 7% as the US Treasrury 10Y-2Y yield curve

CPI food prices are up 19% under “Lunchbox Joe” and up 69% under “Green Joe”. True, the American middle class is far worse off under Bidenomics, but it is all about marketing Bidenomics at this point.

Well, at least former NJ Governor Chris Christies (aka, Kristy Kreme) isn’t lecturing us on healthy eating and exercise.

Of course, being a true RINO (Republican in name only), he won’t follow Biden around criticising him. Just critcising Trump. He is part of the Globalist Romney RINO Party (GRR).

Bidenomics In 3 Charts! Net Cash Farm Income Growth Negative, Office Vacancy Rate Now Higher Than Financial Crisis, 19% Growth In Federal Debt And $194 TRILLION In Unfunded Liabilities (WEF’s Klaus Schwab Approves Biden’s Message!)

Bidenomics is a train wreck. But unlike E. Palestine Ohio, the site of a train derailment and massive toxic spill (for which Biden has yet to visit), Bidenomics is a continuing train wreck.

The first chart is the record decline in US net cash farm income. Now in negative growth!

Second, US office vacancy rate is now higher than the peak during the financial crisis. Of course, Covid shutdowns and work from home is the primary driver, but Democrat crime policies are making it more hazardous to work in offices in major American cities, so Bidenomics isn’t helping.

Under Bidenomics, US debt is now near $33 trillion. Up 19% under Biden. And while not Biden’s fault, the US has promised $194 TRILLION in unfunded liabilities. Biden won’t do anything to halt the entitlement growth.

Is Biden acting on behalf of World Economic Forum’s Klaus Schwab? Well, Biden appointed John Kerry, another dimwitted former US Senator like Biden, to be his climate Czar. Kerry wants to shut down farms and starve the population, just like his Overlord Klaus Schwab.

Are Biden and America’s Progressives part of Schwab’s “Great Reset?” Where we eat insects while Biden, Kerry, Schwab and the elites feast on Wagyu beef, foie gras, and expensive champagne. Elitist Treasury Secretary Yellen looks like she could use some Ozempic!

And then we have elitist California governor Gavin “Count Yorga” Newsom opining on Biden’s great “success.” 70% of Americans say things are going badly under Biden, but California Democrat Gov. Gavin Newsom says he’s “very inspired by the master class of the last two-and-a-half years”

Ah, the elite class! Reminds me of the French aristocracy under Louis the 16th and Marie Antoinette. “Let them eat crickets!”

Consumer Credit Growth Plunges in July With Huge Negative Revisions (Wasting Away In Bidenomicsville!)

Bidenomics is terrible! Just a huge payoff to be big donors (the donor class) for green energy, Big Pharma and Big Defense. Now Biden is considering using ankle monitors to prevent illegal immigrants from leaving Texas and traveling to welfare-friendly blue states like California and New York rather than just enforcing the border. The middle class is truly wasting away with Bidenomics.

Let’s start with crashing mortgage refi demand as consumers load up on credit cards to afford rising prices thanks to Bidenomics.

Then we have consumer credit plunging with massive downward revisions.

The Fed reports dramatically weakening consumer credit with negative revisions too.

Consumer Credit data from the Fed, the last two months labeled are May and July, chart by Mish

Consumer Credit Report Revisions

Consumer Credit data from the Fed, chart by Mish

Revision Key Points

  • Most of the revisions are in nonrevolving, but that impacts the totals.
  • Nonrevolving credit rose $1 billion in July, from a negative $22 billion adjustment in June. The Fed revised a reported $3.735 trillion down to $3.713 trillion.
  • In turn, nonrevolving impacted the totals.
  • Total credit rose $11 billion in July, from a negative $23 billion adjustment in June. The Fed revised a reported $4.997 trillion in June down to $4.974 trillion.

Nonrevolving Consumer Credit in Billions of Dollars

Nonrevolving consumer credit data from the Fed, chart by Mish

Nonrevolving Credit Implications

Assuming the data is accurate (unlikely) or at least the revision direction is accurate (likely), mortgage and existing home sales data is suspect.

Real (inflation adjusted) nonrevolving credit peaked in June of 2021.

Consumer Credit in Billions of Dollars Since 1969

Consumer Credit data from the Fed, chart by Mish

Consumers have generally done a pretty good job of avoiding credit card debt thanks to three rounds of fiscal stimulus.

However, inflation kicked in and the stimulus money has been spent. The result is the steep rise in credit card debt as noted by the blue arrow. Let’s hone in on that.

Revolving Consumer Credit in Billions of Dollars

Consumer Credit data from the Fed, Real (inflation adjusted calculation) and chart by Mish

Stunning Steepness in Credit Card Debt Accruals

The speed at which consumers are going into credit card debt is stunning.

It’s hard to maintain lifestyles with rising inflation unless wages keep up.

The BLS and Fed believe the rate of increase in inflation is falling. Assuming the data is correct, consumers are struggling anyway.

What Happens if Jobs Take a Dive?

That’s actually the wrong question. Job revisions (there’s that word again) have been steeply negative.

BLS Job Revision Data from the Philadelphia Fed

Jobs are still positive, assuming (there’s that word again) you believe the numbers and more negative revisions (there’s that word again) are not in the works.

As long as you are making assumptions, if you are rah-rah on the strength of the Biden economy, you may as well assume GDP numbers are correct as well.

My assumption is GDP is flat out wrong and Gross Domestic Income (GDI) numbers are far more likely to be correct than GDP numbers. GDP and GDI are supposed to be the same but aren’t.

GDP vs GDI

On August 30, I commented Negative Revision to 2nd Quarter GDP, Huge Discrepancy with GDI Continues

If you are a GDP and Jobs believer you likely assume (there’s that word again) GDP is accurate. The last three quarters are +2.6%, 2.0%, and 2.1%.

In contrast, the last three measures of GDI are -3.3%, -1.8%, and +0.5% with the more recent quarter the most likely to be the most revised.

The Fed Is Making Decisions on Poor, Untimely Data, Frequently Revised

I tied many of the ideas in this post together, in far more detail (absent the credit card revisions), in my previous post The Fed Is Making Decisions on Poor, Untimely Data, Frequently Revised

Please give it a look. Meanwhile, damn the revisions, full belief ahead.

All this despite M1 Money exploding.

For those of you in Columbus Ohio, I cannot recommend Fyzical Therapy and Balance Center in Upper Arlington more highly. Ask for Carmen Soranno!

Fixed-income Update! REAL 10Y Yield Climbs To Near 2%, Mortgage Rate Climbs To 7.62%, Home Purchase Mortgage Apps Decline To 1995 Levels, 2Y Treasury Yield Breaches 2%, UST 10Y-2Y Yield Curve Remains Inverted (Wasting Away Again In Bidenomicsville)

As the late crooner Jimmy Buffet sang, the US economy is wasting away in Bidenomicsville, looking for our lost economy for the middle class and low wage worker.

As Bidenomics fails to do anything other than make big donors wealthier (green energy companies, big tech and union bosses, etc), we are seeing the impacts of Fed monetary tightening to combat inflation caused by Biden/Pelosi/Schumer’s spending spree.

First, the 10-year REAL Treasury yield is close to breaching 2%.

Second, 30-year mortgage rates are now 7.62%, up over 150% under Bidenomics.

Third, mortgage purchase applications crashed to the lowest level since 1995.

Fourth, the 2-year Treasury yield just breached 5%.

Fifth, the 10Y-2Y yield curve remains deeply inverted.

Bidenomics Strikes Again! US Mortgage Purchase Mortgage Demand Lowest in 28 Years As Bank Deposits Down -4% YoY (Purchase Demand Down -28% YoY)

Bidenomics’ new themesong, “I’ve youv’e got the money, honey, I’ve got the time.” Otherwise, sod off.

Speaking of Bidenomics, US mortgage purchase demand just declined to the lowest level in 28 years.

Mortgage applications decreased 2.9 percent from one week earlier, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending September 1, 2023.

The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, decreased 2.9 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier. On an unadjusted basis, the Index decreased 5 percent compared with the previous week. The Refinance Index decreased 5 percent from the previous week and was 30 percent lower than the same week one year ago. The seasonally adjusted Purchase Index decreased 2 percent from one week earlier. The unadjusted Purchase Index decreased 5 percent compared with the previous week and was 28 percent lower than the same week one year ago.

This is not good.

Bank deposits, a source of bank lending, are down -4% YoY as The Fed tightens rates.

Here is Lefty Frizzell’s original version of the Bidenomic’s themesong “If you’ve got the money, honey,I’ve got the time.” Like big donors receiving green energy subsidies. But not middle class mortgage borrowers.

US Beginning Credit Super Cycle (Bidenomics = Inflation, Rising Debt, Rising Delinquencies) Mortgage Rates UP 158% Under Bidenomics

Thanks to Bidenomics, code for massive Federal spending on green energy initiatives and payoffs fo large donors, we have agonizing inflation and consumers are borrowing more and more to cope with inflation. And with the increased use of debt comes …. drumroll … delinquenices!

Let’s start with mortgage loans, the overall delinquency rate is 63bps, near record lows, likely due to the huge home appreciation of the last few years which padded the equity cushion for most homeowners. Even the youngest cohort (18-29 years old) has a delinquency rate only 30bps higher than the aggregate. Unlike the 2007-2011 period, the credit cycle is not playing out in the real estate market.

The US conforming mortgage rate is UP 158% under Bidenomics.

Let’s move on to some forms of consumer loans, where the story is a little more daunting.

Auto loans are definitely the epicenter of the credit cycle. While the overall average is a still somewhat tame 2.41%, younger borrowers are not keeping up. Younger borrowers have delinquency rates that are 1-2% higher than the average while the inverse is true for older borrowers. Eighteen-to-thirty-nine year-old borrowers have the highest delinquency rate in 13 years.

Somehow, I sense that used car lots are going to start filling up again as these vehicles get repossessed. This should put downward pressure on used car prices, bringing that element of inflation down. This is one of the channels through which monetary policy works.

Lastly, I’ll take a look at credit card delinquencies.

Here is where we can really see the stresses building.

  • First, the overall delinquency rate has about doubled from 2.5% to 5% over the last couple years.
  • Second, older borrowers have seen a tick up in delinquency rates, a feature we don’t really see in other credit products.
  • Third, one in 12 younger 18-29 year-old borrowers are 90+ days late making their credit card payments.

Credit Card Delinquency Rate across all commercial banks hit 2.77% in the 2nd quarter, the highest level in more than a decade.

In conclusion, we are in the early days of a consumer credit cycle. Younger borrowers are the weakest link in this analysis, and this makes me wonder where rates go when student debt payments turn back on at the end of the month.