The Federal Reserve reminds me of The Stones’ song “Tumbling Dice.” Why? The Fed can’t tell if inflation is cooling or re-accelerating. Hence, they are just rolling dice.
Let’s start with mortgage rates, a critical component of the housing and CRE markets. Mortgage rates remain up 163% since 2021, not great for housing affordability. Despite recent small declines in the mortgage rate. The 10Y-2Y Treasury curve is also going deeper into reversion … again.
However, the data was more mixed with US Manufacturing falling more than expected to 49.4 – back into contraction – (vs 49.9 exp) from 50.0 in October. However, US Services unexpectedly rose from 50.6 to 50.8 (exp 50.3).
“The US private sector remained in expansionary territory in November, as firms signalled another marginal rise in business activity. Moreover, demand conditions – largely driven by the service sector – improved as new orders returned to growth for the first time in four months.
The upturn was historically subdued, however, amid challenges securing orders as customers remained concerned about global economic uncertainty, muted demand and high interest rates.
Businesses cut employment for the first time in almost three-and-a-half years in response to concerns about the outlook. Job shedding has spread beyond the manufacturing sector, as services firms signalled a renewed drop in staff in November as cost savings were sought.
“On a more positive note, input price inflation softened again, with cost burdens rising at the slowest rate in over three years. The impact of hikes in oil prices appear to be dissipating in the manufacturing sector, where the rate of cost inflation slowed notably.
Although ticking up slightly, selling price inflation remained subdued relative to the average over the last three years and was consistent with a rate of increase close to the Fed’s 2% target.”
The US data comes after yesterday’s Euro area composite flash PMI increased by 0.6pt to 47.1, above consensus expectations, driven by a meaningful acceleration in Germany and the periphery, partially offset by a marginal decline in France. In the UK, the composite flash PMI improved meaningfully and entered expansionary territory at 50.1, above consensus expectations, on the back of a pickup in both sectors, with the services sector index entering positive territory at 50.5.
Goldman sees three main takeaways from today’s data.
First, we see a potential turning point in Euro area activity, with forward-looking indicators all improving in November, potentially setting a positive stage for the remainder of the year and the beginning of 2024. While the improvement seems to be broad-based, the upside surprises in the manufacturing sector in Germany and the Euro area as a whole may point to early signs of the sector’s revival.
Second, inflationary pressures, after moderating for some time, show signs of renewed intensification in the Euro area, as reflected by the output and input price components ticking up in November.
Third, UK growth momentum was meaningfully better than last month, and is picking up across the board, with the headline and services indices coming in above 50. This, however, is now accompanied by an increase in cost pressures, with both the input and output price indices edging up in November.
Finally, back to the US, S&P Global found that US business uncertainty was also heightened among US firms, as expectations regarding the year-ahead outlook slipped to the weakest since July.
A record 130.7 million people are expected to shop in stores and online in the U.S. on Black Friday this year, the National Retail Federation (NRF) estimates. The event is known for crowds lining up at big-box stores at dawn to scoop up discounted TVs and home appliances.
But at 6 a.m. on Friday at a Walmart in New Milford, Connecticut, the parking lot was only half full.
“It’s a lot quieter this year, a lot quieter,” said shopper Theresa Forsberg, who visits the same five stores with her family at dawn every Black Friday. She was at a nearby Kohl’s (KSS.N) store at 5 a.m.
Fifth Avenue, one of the world’s top shopping streets, is dead quiet on Black Friday — at least by New York’s boisterous standards.
The strip of high-end shops from brands like Louis Vuitton and Cartier has largely recovered since its pandemic lull, where vacancies had once reached nearly 30% in Midtown East. Some vestiges of that struggle remain, with a few empty storefronts covered up or filled with little art installations. Yet the street has managed to keep its title as the most expensive retail area on the planet by rent per square foot, according to Cushman & Wakefield.
Mortgage rates up 163% since 2021, manufacturing PMI in contraction and Black Friday shopping muted. Not good. The Fed is rolling the dice on what to do next.
Yes, prices of turkey (that we eat) and gasoline (used to drive to family/friends) have declined a little recently. BUT turkey prices are still up by 235% since Biden was sworn in as President. And gasoline prices are still up 47%. One of Biden’s “economists” came out and said gasoline is now lower than it was in 2020. WRONG! Look at the chart below from The Federal Reserve of St. Louis.
Being politicians, The Biden Administration take credit for RECENTLY declining prices, but failing to mention that declining prices have more to do with declining M2 Money growth (now -3.6% YoY) after the enormous burst in Federal spending with Covid.
With turkey prices up 235% under Biden, I will be eating turkey SPAM tonight. And a small portion at that!
The US is experiencing a fiscal inferno thanks to out of control Federal spending and debt issurace.
The US government collects about $2.5 trillion per year in personal income taxes. Of that about $1 trillion per year (40%) is being consumed by interest on the national debt. REAL Federal interest payments of the debt is skyrocketing!
Interest on the debt is growing as old cheap debt matures and gets refinanced at the new higher rates. Plus new debt added every year.
Within a few more years, at this pace, 100% of personal income taxes will be going to pay interest on the US nationaldebt.
Yes, US national debt is at $33.75 trillion and growing awfully fast. Of course, that is small potatoes compared to the $211.7 TRILLION in unfunded Federal promises (entitlements). That means that unfunded promises are 6.27 times the current national debt. There isn’t enough taxable income from individuals to pay for the promised entitlements.
NY Senator Chuckles Schumer: “We did it Joe! We broke the back of the US economy!”
As of June, the bottom 80% of households by income, when adjusted for inflation, had lower bank deposits and other liquid assets compared to their status in March 2020. The decline marks a significant shift from the initial phases of the pandemic, where various factors, including government financial support and restricted spending opportunities during lockdowns, led to an accumulation of excess savings.
In other words, the vast majority of all Americans have been getting poorer.
The Federal Reserve, along with Bloomberg calculations, identified a rapid drawdown of these excess savings, particularly stark among the lower-income groups. While all income groups have experienced a decrease in real-term cash balances from the peak in 2021, the disparity is noteworthy. The wealthiest one-fifth of households still have cash savings approximately 8% above their pre-COVID levels. In stark contrast, the poorest two-fifths have witnessed an 8% decrease, and the next 40% — broadly representing the middle class — have seen their cash savings fall below pre-pandemic levels.
Even checkable deposits and currency held by the top 1% (call it the Kerry Class after multi-millionaire and Statist parasite John Kerry, Biden’s climate “envoy”) are soaring while the bottom 50% are seeing only a tepid rise.
Meanwhile, UMich inflation expectations rose even further intra-month, jumping from 4.4% to 4.5% final (for 1Y inflation outlook) and from 3.1 to 3.2% final (for 5-10Y outlook).
Let’s see if Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen tries to explain once again that Americans just don’t understand how great Bidenomics is.
Biden’s economic Dance Macabre! Or Biden’s Mortgage Macabre! Mortgage purchase demand actually fell -1% from the previous week (WoW) and is down -20% from the previous year (YoY).
Mortgage applications increased 3.0 percent from one week earlier, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending November 17, 2023.
The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, increased 3.0 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier. On an unadjusted basis, the Index decreased 0.1 percent compared with the previous week. The Refinance Index increased 2 percent from the previous week and was 4 percent lower than the same week one year ago. The seasonally adjusted Purchase Index increased 4 percent from one week earlier. The unadjusted Purchase Index decreased 1 percent compared with the previous week and was 20 percent lower than the same week one year ago.
And MBA mortgage refis
Not surprising since most homeowners have locked in low borrowing costs prior to the Biden/Congress Covid spendathon and the inflation that followed.
After all, we are seeing the worst home sales data since the 1970s.
Yes, even KJP is finding it difficult to sell Bidenomics to the public (only talking heads like The View and Morning Joe are still trumpeting the greatness of Bidenomics). And now KJP and the Administration are selling Biden’s age of 81 as a treasure trove of experience. Except that Biden’s record in the Senate is an embarrasment. And Biden keeps shuffling and falling and mumbling through his speeches. Watch Biden’s handlers make sure he doesn’t fall again before the election.
Bidenomics is the economy’s Highway to Hell! Massive, staggering misallocation of scare resources to fund endless wars, green energy fraud, and massive wealth transfers to immigrants while disabled veterans suffer. Now we see that the US leading economic indicators is down -7.6%, definitely smelling like a recession.
On a year-over-year (YoY) basis, the Leading Economic Indicators is down 7.6% (down YoY for 16 straight months) – close to its biggest YoY drop since 2008 (Lehman) outside of the COVID lockdown-enforced collapse.
On a monthly basis (MoM), leading economics indicators are down -0.8%. It has been going down for 16 straight months. Here are the components.
Most of the components are in red and need to be back in black for economic growth.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, a mega pro-China elitist, acknowledges that Bidenomics isn’t popular but she attributes that to people not understanding how good Bidenomics is! It is good for the 1% elitist, donor class. But not for the US middle class.
At least Argentina elected AC/DC guitarist Angus Young as President!
Rubino says, “If the U.S. government is running crisis level deficits, which it is right now, borrowing money and paying interest on it means we are in a financial death spiral…”
“The debt goes up, the interest on the debt goes up and that raises the debt even further, and you just spiral out of control.
We are there right now. The official U.S. debt is $33.5 trillion. It’s growing by $1.7 trillion a year, and $1 trillion of that is interest costs.
Interest costs are rising as the overall debt goes up. Then throw in this incredibly reckless military spending in the guise of foreign aid, and you get a society that has completely lost control.
That’s where we are now.
We are in the blowoff stage of a 70-year credit super-cycle.
Those things do not end with a whimper, and they certainly do not end with a soft landing. They end with a bang, and the bang is going to be centered on the currency.
People are going to look at this and say, ‘Do I really want to hold the currency or bonds of a country that is destroying its finances at this trajectory and this scale?’ The answer will be ‘No.’
At that point, it is game over for a deeply indebted economy. We are headed that way fast, and these wars are taking us that way even faster.”
If the Fed keeps raising interest rates, the economy tanks, but you protect the dollar. If you cut interest rates, you spike inflation even more, and the U.S. dollar tanks.
Rubino says in the end, we get a “massive reset,” and the everything bubble explodes.
Rubino says the dollar is going to decline and, at some point, it starts to go into freefall in terms of buying power. Rubino explains,
“If a currency starts to decline in a disorderly way, then you have a massive financial crisis on your hands.
That is definitely where Japan is right now. The U.S. is headed that way fast.
So, once we reach that point, there is no fix.
Then it is only a matter of time that everybody realizes that there is no fix, and they just bail on the whole experiment, and that’s where we are headed.”
Rubino talks about plunging home prices, more trouble coming in the commercial real estate market and why you need gold and silver as core assets during a currency reset.
Riots, already happening in American cities (not to mention looting in New York City, Chicago, San Francisco and Los Angeles), will accelerate if Congress attempts to curtail entitlements (now at $211.65 TRILLION).
Biden’s terrible economic policies and horrid fiscal managment has put stress on The Federal Reserve. The Federal Reserve paid an estimated $76 billion to the Treasury in 2022 while banks’ willingness to lend has plummeted.
One of the key ways central banks absorb liquidity back out of the market is through reverse repo. These are short-term transactions where the Fed sells securities to banks and agrees to buy back at a higher price the next day.
This means banks are being paid to park cash with the Fed instead of injecting it into the economy through loans and fanning the fires of inflation.
That alone is costing the Fed $200M every single day.
In addition, the Fed is spending another $500M in daily interest payments on its reserve policy, i.e. balances that banks are holding in their reserve accounts at the Fed.
Banks’ willingness to lend has plummeted making credit availability increasingly tighter. Current levels have typically ended in recessions.This time is NOT different.
And on the energy side of the market, Biden Invokes ‘Wartime Powers’ to Attack Gas-Powered Furnaces. Of all the stupid things Biden has done, invoking wartime powers to make households use inefficent electric heat pumps instead of gas furnaces in stupid of two levels. First, invoking wartime powers for things unrelated to national defense is reckless and capricious. Second, electric heat pumps in the colder areas of the country is stupid as well. Electric heat pumps are inefficient, unless the goal of Biden and his Idiocracy is to “cull the herd” or kill off people during winter months (I had an electric heat pump in a condo I owned and it was terrible in winter months).
Yes, the Biden Administration and The Fed are economic mutilators!
The World Economic Forum (WEF) is a leading pusher of the ESG drug, pushed by the elite class intending to control the world. Unfortunately, numerous American politicians and influencers have attended the Davos meetings and have openly praised the WEF and its leader Klaus Schwab.
ESG investing, or sustainable responsible investing (SRI), uses this information about a company to inform investment decisions that prioritize all stakeholders.
Here’s how the Forum’s partners are leading the switch to stakeholder capitalism.
But all is not well with WEF’s ESG drug distribution. In fact, ESG flows into socially consious funds were a big thing during Covid (2020) and the first year of Biden’s Reign of Error. But ESG flows slowed sharply in 2022 and seeing net outflows in 2023.
US borrowers are retreating en masse from the world’s second-biggest ESG debt class.
The $1.5 trillion market for sustainability-linked loans, in which borrowing is tied to environmental, social or governance goals, has seen an overall slowdown in volumes this year as both interest rates and greenwashing fears rise. But nowhere has the decline been as precipitous as in the US, where the number of new sustainability-linked loans is down 80% from a year earlier.
But ESG is still relatively popular in Europe, Middle East and Africa (orange). But taste for ESG is waning around the globe. But the selection of Biden as President in the US marked a surge in ESG -tied loans in 2021 and 2022 (not to mention the insane levels of spending out of Biden and Congress, much tied to the sustainability, green energy fantasy.
Loans with terms tied to borrower’s ESG goals have fallen worldwide.
Several states (largely blue states like California, Minnesota, Illinois, and Colorado have pro-ESG laws) while several states have anti-ESG laws (largely red states like Montana, Idaho, North Dakota, Kansas, Utah, Indiana, Arkansas, Florida, and West Virginia).
And of course, global warning may not be as dire as John Kerry and Greta Thunberg say.
WEF’s Klaus Schwab about to get sniffed by his 80-year old puppet, Joe Biden. In fact, Biden is singing “I’m your puppet.”
Here is Hunter Biden welcoming the Green Energy fairy and all the trillions in misallocated spending it brings.
Housing Starts: Privately‐owned housing starts in October were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1,372, the October 2022 rate of 1,432,000. Single‐family housing starts in October were at a rate of 970,000; this is 0.2 percent above the revised September figure of 968,000. The October rate for units in buildings with five units or more was 382,000.
Building Permits: Privately‐owned housing units authorized by building permits in October were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1,487,000. This is 1.1 percent above the revised September rate of 1,471,000, but is 4.4 percent below the October 2022 rate of 1,555,000. Single‐family authorizations in October were at a rate of 968,000; this is 0.5 percent above the revised September figure of 963,000. Authorizations of units in buildings with five units or more were at a rate of 469,000 in October.
Total starts were down 4.2% in October compared to October 2022. And starts year-to-date are down 11.3% compared to last year.
In YoY terms (change since one year ago), shows housing starts declining with dying M2 Money growth.
Starts have been down year-over-year for 16 of the last 18 months (May and July 2023 were the exceptions), and total starts will be down this year – although the year-over-year comparisons are somewhat easier in Q4.
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