Addicted To Gov? Government Worker Wage Growth Hits Record High As Savings Rate Falls To 3.7% (Acyclical Core PCE inflation Remains Extremely High)

Americans are addicted to gov. And government is addicted to spending (and creating more debt).

Let’s look at wage growth for government apparatchiks relative to private sector workers. While wage growth overall was modest, it is government wage growth that is driving it – now at a record high!

Source: Bloomberg

And on the back of that, the savings rate tumbled from 4.1% of DPI to 3.7%…

The vast majority of the reduction in inflation has been ‘cyclical’. Acyclical Core PCE inflation remains extremely high, although it has fallen from its highs.

Source: Bloomberg

The Empire Strikes Out! Empire Fed Manufacturing Survey Suffers Biggest 2-Month Collapse (Ex-COVID) In History

The themesong for Bidenomics is the Imperial March from Star Wars.

The New York Fed’s Empire State Manufacturing Survey for January crashed from -14.5 to -43.7 – the worst print in the survey’s history outside of the COVID lockdowns…

Source: Bloomberg

This chart show employees crashing by -6.9.

The -43.7 print was a stunning 10 standard deviations below expectations of a bounce to -5.0…

Source: Bloomberg

Under the hood, it was a bloodbath. New orders slumped more than 38 points to minus 49.4, the weakest since April 2020, while shipments dropped by the most since August. Worse still, the index of prices paid for materials increased to a three-month high.

But hope remains high as the six-month outlook for overall activity improved to a three-month high, suggesting manufacturing will stabilize at a weak level. The measure of the outlook for capital expenditures increased to the highest since April 2023, suggesting a pickup in investment.

However, the spread between current reality and a hopeful future is at near record highs (record Ex-COVID-lockdowns)…

“Bidenomics” for the win…

Government Power! Core Producer Prices Up 17% Under Biden But 3rd Straight Month Of ‘Deflation’ (Consumer Purchasing Power Down 15% Under Biden)

Government power is causing inflation and middle class economic repression.

For example, US credit card debt is at an all-time high as consumers attempt to cope with inflation under Biden.

While inflation RATE is finally cooling off, the LEVEL of inflation remains high. Purchasing power for consumers is down 15% under Vacation Joe.

With structural inflation rising again.

Following yesterday’s hotter-than-expected CPI, this morning’s Producer Price Index was expected to accelerate (headline not core). However, it did not – headline PPI actually decline 0.1% MoM (+0.1% MoM exp). That is the 3rd straight month of ‘deflation’ but inched PPI YoY up to +1.0%

Source: Bloomberg

Energy and Construction cost deflation dominated the headline PPI MoM decline…

Source: Bloomberg

Energy and Food deflation dominated the slowing of the YoY PPI (though Services is re-accelerating)…

Source: Bloomberg

Excluding food and energy, the core PPI was unchanged MoM in December – the third month of unchanged in a row, which dfragged the Core PPI YoY down to +1.8% (the lowest since Dec 2020)…

Source: Bloomberg

Goods PPI deflated and Services was unchanged…

Half of the decrease in the index for final demand goods is attributable to prices for diesel fuel, which dropped 12.4%

Over 80% of the decrease in the index for unprocessed goods for intermediate demand can be attributed to a 13.2% drop in prices for crude petroleum.

Reminder, disinflation does not mean lower prices. Core producer prices are up 16.9% since President Biden came into office (and headline PPI up over 18%)

Source: Bloomberg

Finally, the deflationary impulse remains for the headline PPI as ‘intermediate PPI’ remains below zero BUT it is starting to accelerate higher…

Source: Bloomberg

That’s a little worrying given The Fed seems adamant it wants to cut in March to save the banking system from collapse.

I am amazed that the Biden family babysitter (Jill Biden) is trashing Trump supporters calling them insurrectionist and dangerous extremists while her demented husband tries to use courts to remove his primary Presidential candidate from the ballot and violates Federal law by leaving the border wide open, letting in millions of unvetted immigrants. Rep Jerry Nadler (D-NY) admitted that he is in favor of open borders because 1) fruits and vegetables need to be picked and 2) Democrats need to import Democrat voters because Americans are fed up with Democrat policies. Like rampant inflation.

And Jill Biden said Joe works hard EVERY DAY! Except for the near 40% of his Presidency spent on vacations to Delaware, Nantucket, Virgin Islands and whereever else large corporate donors live.

The Incredible Shrinking Econony! Initial US Employment Overstated By 439,000 Jobs In 2023, Civilian Labor Force Shrinks By 636,000 In December (Most Jobs Created In Government)

The closer we look at the December jobs report, the worse it gets. Its like the lights are on, but nobody is home.

A closer look at the numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that the government quietly erased 439,000 jobs through November 2023.

That means its initial jobs results were inflated by 439,000 positions, and the job market is not as healthy as the government suggests. 

Since the government wiped out 439,000 jobs after the fact, the total percentage of jobs created by the government last year is even higher. 

But just in December, the civilian labor force shrunk by 636,000 jobs.

Increased government hiring has been driving the jobs numbers higher. This is NOT good since government doesn’t produce anything other than regulations and red tape.

Again, the government sector in December ranked high in job creation.

The health care and social assistance sector, which relies heavily on money from government spending, created about 59,000 jobs.

The economy lost 1.5 million full-time workers since June of last year, while adding 796,000 part-time workers.

That means more workers are holding down multiple jobs to pay for a higher cost of living due to a cumulative 17.4% inflation rate under this White House.

That’s not a good sign.

US Fiscal Inferno! US Government Debt Now Bigger Than US Economy, But Unfunded Liabilities (Promises) Are $632k Per Citizen (As California’s Governor Newsom Gives Away Free Healthcare To Illegal Immigrants)

Yes, the US is engulfed in a fiscal inferno!

US government debt is now bigger than the US economy. This was unseen until 2012 when debt surpassed GDP for the first time.

In addition to almost $34 trillion in debt from our crazy spending, out-of-control government, we are on the hook for almost $213 TRILLION in unfunded liabilites (promises made to Americans that will likely not be honored).

The sad thing about the US Debt Clock summary is the $632,195 share per citizen of unfunded liabilties. That raises two questions. First, how can California’s Ken doll Governor Gavin “Greasy” Newsom give away free healthcare to ALL illegal immigrants? Second, since the invasion of illegal immigrants began under Biden/Mayorkas, will they be on the hook for the unfunded liabilities which they disordinately consume? Not likely. Maybe we should charge each illegal immigrant $632k admission fee.

California’s Ken doll Governor and fiscal imbecile Gavin Newsom.

Hey Joe! SOFR Suddenly Soars To Record High As Key Funding Spread Hints At Imminent Liquidity Crunch

Hey Joe (BIDEN)! Please stop destroying the economy!! (Here is my favorite version by Jim Pons and The Leaves!). The most lame version? The Byrds and David Crosby.

Over a month ago (and well before the Fed’s “shocking” dovish pivot) as the Fed’s Overnight Reverse Repo tumbled below $900 billion for the first time since June 2021 amid a growing debate of where and when the Fed’s reserve scarcity constraint will be hit, we warned that liquidity is rapidly approaching the reverse repo constraint level which could emerge as soon as the RRP facility dropped to $700 billion, at which point the market’s all-important credit plumbing will start to crack.

We didn’t have long to wait because just a few days later, on December 1 (just after the customary month-end window dressing period) when reverse repo tumbled to a fresh multi-year low of $765 billion…

… things indeed broke as we explained in “Sudden Spike In SOFR Hints At Mounting Reserve Shortage, Early Restart Of QE” (in which we correctly previewed the coming Fed pivot at a time when most were still dead certain that Powell would only care about inflation for months to come): that’s when the the all-important SOFR rate (i.e., the new Libor) unexpectedly jumped 6bps to 5.39%, the highest on record…

… also resulting in the largest SOFR spike vs ON RRP since Jan ’21, which hit 6bps.

The spike caught almost everyone by surprise, even such Fed-watching luminaries as BofA’s Marc Cabana because it was with “no new UST settlements, lower repo volumes, and lower sponsored bi-lateral volumes.”  More ominously, and confirming our take from three weeks ago, Cabana warned at the time (full note here) that “the move is consistent with the slow theme of less cash & more collateral in the system” – i.e., growing reserve scarcity –  and “may have been exacerbated by elevated dealer inventories, bi-lateral borrowing need, and limited excess cash to backstop repo. If funding pressure persists, it risks Fed re-assessment of ample banking system reserves & potential early end to QT.”

Then, the mini liquidity crisis disappeared almost as fast as it emerged, as SOFR rates eased off and the SOFR-Fed Funds spread normalized once GSE cash entered the market as it does every month….

… until today when not only did SOFR hit a new record high, ironically at a time when the market is pricing in more than 6 rate cuts in 2024…

… but the spread between the SOFR and the effective Fed Funds rate just spiked to the highest level since the March 2020 repo crisis…

.. with a similar move also observed in the spread between SOFR rate and the O/N Reverse Repo which similarly blew out to the widest since the start of 2021.

While there was no specific catalyst behind the sudden spike, two factors are the likely culprits: the year-end liquidity crunch, and the recent sharp increase in the Fed’s reverse repo facility, which has increased from a multi-year low of $683 billion on Dec 15 to yesterday’s $830 billion, and which STIR strategists expect will shoot up above $1 trillion in today’s final for 2023 reverse repo operation as a whopping $300+ billion in short-term liquidity in pulled from markets in just days.

That’s the bad news.

The good news is that come 2024 in a few hours, and specifically the first day of trading on Jan 2, we expect the reverse repo facility to plummet back to $700 billion once the year-end window dressing is over (especially with total US debt rising above $34 trillion to start the year), and floods the system with fresh liquidity which will stabilize the monetary plumbing at least until reverse repo dips below that key level of $700 billion at which point we expect the SOFR spikes to become a daily occurrence, and one which the Fed will no longer be able to ignore.

Indeed, one can already see traces of this in the repo market, where the rate on overnight GC repo first surged to 5.625% at the open on the final trading day of December before dropping to 5.45%, according to ICAP. It has since climbed back to 5.50%. But that’s still lower than where repo rates for Dec. 29 were trading during the prior session, as markets now start frontrunning the coming reverse repo liquidity flood.

Of course, once reverse repo eventually tumbles to $0 some time in March, all bets are off and the narrative shift to the next QE will begin.

“Say, can I sniff you if you take Trump off of Maine’s Presidential ballot??”

The Banks Are Not Alright! Banks Continue To Lose Deposits (21 Straight Weeks Of Negative Bank Credit Growth)

While The Who Sang “The Kid’s Are Alright” ,the same can’t be said of banks.

It has been nine months since the spectacular and sudden collapse of Silicon Valley Bank.

After witnessing three of the four largest bank failures in U.S. history in 2023, the attention of the media and the markets has turned elsewhere. Banking crisis? It is as though it never happened. Having fallen by some 40 percent in March, the NASDAQ Bank Index has recovered to within 15 percent of its high from February. In the last few months, nearly all markets have gone on a bull run, including bank stocks.

Yet, and despite the relative quiet, the banking sector is not in great shape. Here are some of the reasons why.

Banks continue to lose deposits. According to data from the Federal Deposit Insurance. Corp. (FDIC), U.S. banks have now lost deposits for six consecutive quarters. While the pace has slowed from the first quarter of 2023, in which nearly $500 billion of deposits were removed from the banking system, approximately $190 billion of deposits have been withdrawn in the last two quarters. Indeed, U.S. banks have lost a net $1.1 trillion of deposits since the beginning of 2022 when interest rates began to rise.

With customer deposits growing scarce, U.S. banks are instead relying on emergency funding lines from the Federal Reserve Banks and the Federal Home Loan Bank (FHLB) system. FHLB bond capital raising, of which the proceeds are used to fund the banks, is up 89 percent year over year through November and looks set to reach $1.1 trillion for 2023. Use of the Bank Term Funding Program, the emergency line put in place by the Fed in March 2023, reached an all-time high last week at $131.3 billion.

This does not reflect normal market operations.

This is a sign that the bank funding markets aren’t operating properly, and that the regulators are stepping in to help prop up the system.

The growing gap between the rate on the Federal Reserve’s nascent funding facility and what the central bank pays institutions parking reserves suggests officials will let the program expire in March, according to Wrightson ICAP.

“In justifying the generous terms of the original program, the Fed cited the ‘unusual and exigent’ market conditions facing the banking industry following last spring’s deposit runs,” Wrightson ICAP economist Lou Crandall wrote in a note to clients.

“It would be difficult to defend a renewal in today’s more normal environment.”

What happens then?]

So much for the liabilities side. But banks face challenges on the asset side as well.

Unrealized losses on investment securities, which is the same problem that got SVB into trouble a year ago, continue to rise. U.S. banks reported unrealized losses of over $684 billion in the third quarter, up 22 percent from the second quarter. Of these unrealized losses on securities, $294 billion are categorized as available for sale (AFS), as opposed to held to maturity (HTM), whereby the bank intends to hold the asset and (hopefully) recapture principle at the end of the term. The high amount of AFS suggests that if interest rates remain “higher for longer,” then a portion of these losses will begin to realize in 2024 as they are sold by the banks. This will pressure profitability and capital levels.

Net income is declining across the banking system generally, but particularly among the smaller community banks. Credit quality is deteriorating, but has not yet reached crisis level. Commercial real estate continues to drive the increase in problem loans.

To grow (or at least slow the decline) of deposits, banks are going to have offer rates that are somewhat competitive with money market funds (considering that bank deposits are insured by the FDIC and thus relatively safe), and that offer positive real (i.e., after inflation) returns. With inflation persisting in the range of 3–4 percent, this means that banks will have to offer 4–5 percent to be relevant. This isn’t going to work for the banks. They won’t be able to maintain profitability. And it won’t work for the U.S. Treasury, which itself is committed to trillion-dollar bond issuances each quarter, which also must offer a positive interest rate above investor perceptions of inflation and the deteriorating fiscal condition of the U.S. government.

If funding costs rise further, or if unrealized losses begin to realize, banks will start taking hits to their capital levels. This will spook the markets, including depositors, and we may find ourselves in round two of deposit runs. To head off these challenges, some banks are looking to merge. There have been 78 bank deals announced in the second half of 2023, mostly among the smaller and community banks. But this won’t work in many situations where the result is the proverbial “two drunks holding each other up.”

Investor optimism is permeating markets going into year-end, with most all asset classes continuing to rise. But we must not lose sight of the banks. They are not out of the woods yet. While there is a “goldilocks” scenario in which the banking sector makes a soft landing, the risk of another set of bank failures in 2024 remains meaningful.

And we have 21 straight weeks of negative growth in bank credit. And The Fed still has a staggering amount of financial stimulus outstanding.

With all hell breaking loose around the world, President Biden has gone on yet another vacation, this time to the Virgin Islands to stay at the home of a big donor. But his handlers run things, not Vacation Joe.

Housing Market Index Remains Depressed Under Bidenomics As Federal Debt SOARS (Its A Long Way To The Bottom!)

As AC/DC sang; “Its a long way to the top bottom.” But Bidenomics is sending us there!

Today, the NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index rose slightly on falling mortgages. But the housing market index remains depressed since Biden seized the reigns of power in 2021.

The Federal government added $7 trillion in debt since 2020 while it took 215 years to get to $7 trillion before Covid and Bidenomics.

In what can simply be called fiscal insanity, The Federal government is borrowing like there is no tomorrow (given that Biden is 81 years old, this isn’t far off) displacing businesses and households. Heaven help us if the Federal government has to borrow more money to fight a real war like World War II.

So, the massive Federal debt gorging isn’t helping the housing market.

Core Inflation Rises 0.3% In November, Up 4% YoY (Shelter Up 0.4% MoM and 6.5% YoY

Well, November inflation numbers are out and we see core inflation increased along with shelter.

In November, the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers increased 0.1 percent, seasonally adjusted, and rose 3.1 percent over the last 12 months, not seasonally adjusted. The index for all items less food and energy increased 0.3 percent in November (SA); up 4.0 percent over the year (NSA).

Yes, core inflation (CPI less food and energy commodities) is up 0.3% in November MoM and up 4% YoY. Shelter is up 0.4% MoM an up 6.5% YoY.

Energy declined considerably but Used Car prices rose.

Oil Drops In Price Along With Citi Economic Surprise Index, SOFR Rate Hits All-time High, Fed REPOs Soar!

Biden is hoping for one more term as President. And declining oil prices might help him get re-elected.

But we have a battle brewing! The United Nations and World Economic Forum (and their proxies John Kerry, Greta Thunberg and Green Joe Biden) against …. everyone else. Despite Biden’s lame attempts (through climate envoy John Kerry) at getting China to go to green energy and rid themselves of fossil fuels, China claims a new discovery of roughly 1.78 billion barrels of oil. Kristalina Georgieva, a Bulgarian economist who serves as the managing director of the International Monetary Fund, said Monday that the IMF wants to see countries implement punishing new carbon taxes to “fight climate change.” Kristalnacht won’t like China’s oil discovery either.

Then we have oil production surging (think of WEF’s Klaus Schwab’s scowling face) and crude oil prices sinking to 6 month lows.

Oil prices are dropping along with the Citi Economic Surprise Index.

In financial markets, we have the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) jumped to a record high.

And Treasuries purchased by The Federal Reserve (repos) skyrocketed this week.

On the gold side, we see a Golden Cross (not William Jennings Bryan’s Cross of Silver).

WEF’s Klaus Schwab won’t like China finding so much cheap energy.