Damn It, Janet! Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen Suggests Much Lower For Much Longer (Make Rates Great Again or MRGA?)

Damn it, Janet! (Yellen)

Former Fed Chair Janet Yellen, notorious for leaving rates too low for too long (TLTL) and then suddely raising them after Donald Trump was elected President, wants rates lower again for much longer. Make rates great again (MRGA?).

On October 5, 2023, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen made a very telling statement about the future course of interest rates.

YELLEN SAYS DEBT SERVICE COSTS WILL BE 1% OF GDP FOR THE NEXT DECADE. – Reuters

Her statement implies that the economy will be strong and the government will run budget surpluses, or interest rates will be near zero for the next ten years.

Instead of guessing what she is pondering, we do some math and arrive at the only possible answer.  

The Government Can’t Afford Today’s Interest Rates

Before walking through various scenarios to figure out what Yellen may be implying, it’s helpful to provide background on what drives her mindset. In our article The Government Can’t Afford Higher For Longer, Much Longer, we shared the following graph and commentary:

Total federal interest expenses should rise by approximately $226 billion over the next twelve months to over $1.15 trillion. For context, from the second quarter of 2010 to the end of 2021, when interest rates were near zero, the interest expense rose by $240 billion in aggregate. More stunningly, the interest expense has increased more in the last three years than in the fifty years prior.

The graph above is just the tip of the fiscal iceberg. Every month, lower-interest-rate debt matures and will be replaced with higher-cost debt.

Higher interest rates are an additional funding burden for the federal government. Janet Yellen surely understands the damaging situation and grasps that higher interest rates are not feasible given current debt levels.

Low-Interest Rates Make Debt Manageable

The government’s debt-to-GDP ratio has climbed three-fold since 1966. Yet, until very recently, the ratio of the federal interest expense to GDP was at its lowest level since 1966.

While the amount of debt rose sharply, its cost was offset by rapidly falling interest rates. As a result, higher debt levels were very manageable.

If $1 trillion of debt with a 4% coupon matures, and the Treasury replaces it with $2 trillion at a 2% coupon, the interest expense doesn’t change despite doubling the debt. While a simplified example, that is essentially what has occurred for the last 30 years.

The following graph compares the 5-year U.S. Treasury note and the implied cost of funding the government’s debt.

In time, as lower interest rate debt is replaced with higher interest rate debt, the benefits of lower rates work in reverse. 

“Debt Service Costs At 1%” – Is It Possible?

We return to Janet Yellen’s message and discuss why she is likely correct.

Balanced Budgets and Unicorns

In the five years leading up to the pandemic, nominal GDP grew at 5.03% annually. Let’s optimistically assume growth continues at 5% consistently for the next ten years. Now, let’s tack on an even bolder presumption: the government balances its budget every year for the next ten years. Thus, the amount of outstanding debt will remain constant. For context, in the last 57 years, there has only been one year in which the amount of debt has not increased.

In such a far-fetched scenario, the debt-to-GDP ratio would drop considerably to 70%. However, interest costs would equal 2% of GDP. Such is much better than the current 3.36% but double Janet Yellen’s 1% objective.

Budget surpluses for the next ten years would lower interest expenses even more and possibly get the interest expense to GDP ratio to 1%. However, the odds of a unicorn spraying rainbows across the sky and the government running a surplus are the same: zero percent.

Consequently, we exclude surpluses as a viable way to reduce the interest expense to a more manageable level.

Budget Deficits And The Magic Of Low-Interest Rates

Balanced budgets or surpluses are unrealistic, given the political and fiscal trends. Further, the economy relies heavily on government spending. While fiscal prudence would be good in the long run, the short-run effect would be a recession.

Instead of using pipe dreams as scenarios, let’s get realistic. The more likely, albeit still optimistic, scenario involves the debt and GDP growing at the same rate. Let’s also assume interest rates remain at current levels. In this exercise, we assume an average borrowing cost of 4.75%, which is a little below the current weighted average funding cost for the government. Under this “realistic” picture, interest expense would climb to 5.6% of GDP.

The only logical variable in the equation that can make Janet Yellen correct is the future interest rate.

To arrive at Yellen’s 1% figure, assuming debt grows at the rate of GDP, interest rates must be much lower.

In time, a weighted average interest rate of 0.85% would put the nation’s interest expense at 1% of GDP.

When Janet Yellen tells us the debt cost to GDP ratio will be 1% over the next ten years, she is really saying interest rates will be below 1% for the next ten years.

Therefore, Janet Yellen must believe that the recent spike in inflation and yields is an anomaly. If the pre-pandemic economic and interest rate trends resume, she will be correct.

Summary

Part of Janet Yellen’s job is to exude confidence to its investors. In this case, it means telling the public that the current jump in interest expenses will not last. While she would probably prefer to be straightforward and say interest rates will be much lower, she must also be sympathetic to the Fed’s job of getting inflation down. Therefore, to walk the party line, she must speak in code, so to speak.

Whether you agree with Yellen’s projection or not, the following CBO graph projecting interest costs as a percentage of tax revenues, courtesy of Bianco Research, highlights that the government has no choice but lower for longer interest rates. The current level of interest rates will bankrupt the nation.

This makes sense. Two global elitists who look down with disdain and want to reprogram MAGA voters. Can we reprogram the MRGA types into letting rates float to market.

US Mortgage Purchase Demand (Applications) Down -19% Since Last Year (Mortgage Rates UP 165% Under Biden)

Now you know why the Mortgage Bankers Association, Home Builders and Realtors send a letter to Fed Chair Powell asking for rate hikes to cease. Mortgage rates are UP 165% under Biden.

But on to the demand side of mortgage finance.

Mortgage applications increased 0.6 percent from one week earlier, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending October 6, 2023.

The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, increased 0.6 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier. On an unadjusted basis, the Index increased 1 percent compared with the previous week. The Refinance Index increased 0.3 percent from the previous week and was 9 percent lower than the same week one year ago. The seasonally adjusted Purchase Index increased 1 percent from one week earlier. The unadjusted Purchase Index increased 1 percent compared with the previous week and was 19 percent lower than the same week one year ago.

Bidenomics! National Debt Increases By Another Half-Trillion In Just 20 Days (To Infinity … And Beyond!) Don’t Forget About The $194+ TRILLION In Unfunded Liabilities That Politicians Promised The Non 1%!

Joe Biden is the Buzz Lightyear of the economy … and not in a good way. Under Biden and the Congressional spending sprees, the US debt is going to infinity … and beyond!

Twenty days.

That’s how long it took the Biden administration to add another half-trillion dollars to the national debt.

Bidenomics certainly requires a lot of borrowing and spending.

On September 15, the debt quietly blew passed $33 trillion. On October 5, it pushed above $33.5 trillion.

Don’t forget about the $194+ TRILLION in unfunded liabilities that politicians promised the non 1%.

By the way, it only took Biden and his willing accomplices in Congress three months to drive the national debt from $32 trillion to $33 trillion.

As of October 5, the debt stood at $33,513,382,512,663.51.

This is an unimaginable amount of money.

To put things into some perspective, the total output of the US economy as measured by GDP was only $25.46 trillion. That means the US economy would have to grow by 33.5% to cover the national debt.

At $33 trillion, the US national debt is more than the total economies of China, Japan, Germany, and the UK combined.

Looking at it another way, as of Oct. 10, every US citizen would have to write a $99,839 check in order to pay off the debt, and every American taxpayer is on the hook for $258,257.

Part of the reason the debt has increased so fast since June is because the Treasury is still rebuilding cash reserves that were depleted during the debt ceiling fight. But the fact remains – the federal government spends too much money.

It’s hard to overstate just how bad the US government’s fiscal situation has become. We have a trifecta of surging debt, massive deficits, and declining federal revenue. The chart below provides a visual perspective – and it doesn’t even account for the last few years.

This relentless increase in debt is happening when the economy is supposedly strong. Typically, a strong economy generates more tax revenue, and deficits shrink. But this isn’t really a strong economy. It is a house of cards built on debt. Fiscal stimulus is helping to prop it up.

That means there is no end in sight to this upward-spiraling national debt.

The biggest issue is the federal government spending addiction. In August alone, the Biden administration spent over $527 billion.

And of course, the federal government is always looking for new reasons to spend money. With war raging in the Middle East, there is already a proposal to send aid to Israel and possibly add more aid to Ukraine to that deal.

As Peter Schiff said in a recent podcast, the US can’t afford peace, much less war.

In fact, the US can’t even afford the interest on the debt.

Uncle Sam’s interest expense is already rising at an astronomical rate, and it’s set to explode.

The federal government has paid well over half a trillion dollars ($630 billion) on interest payments alone in fiscal 2023, with one month left to go. Interest on the debt paid in July exceeded the amount spent on national defense that month. Uncle Sam is well on the way to spending more on interest payments than any line item other than Social Security and Medicare.

The average interest rate on the debt is now at the highest level since 2011, coming in at 2.92% as of the end of August. But that’s still relatively low, and the debt is more than double what it was back in the good ol’ days of 2011.

Meanwhile, the average interest rate is poised to climb rapidly. A lot of the debt currently on the books was financed at very low rates before the Federal Reserve started its hiking cycle. Every month, some of that super-low-yielding paper matures and has to be replaced by bonds yielding much higher rates. That means interest payments will quickly climb much higher unless rates fall.

To give you an idea of where we’re heading, T-bills currently yield about 5.5%, the two-year yield is over 5% and the 10-year currently yields around 4.7%.

This has driven interest payments as a percentage of total tax receipts to over 35%. In other words, the government is already paying more than a third of the taxes it collects on interest expense.

If interest rates remain elevated, or continue rising, interest expenses could climb rapidly into the top three federal expenses. (You can read a more in-depth analysis of the national debt HERE.)

People tend to yawn at the ever-increasing national debt, but it is a ticking time bomb. Who knows how much time is left, but the timer is ticking relentlessly toward zero.

To infiniity and beyond … with Billions Biden! Biden’s 2024 Presidential election campaign photo.

Fear The Talking Fed! 10Y Treasury Yield Subsides As Fed Presidents Speak While Hamas Terrorizes Israel (Fed Halting Rate Increases OR Flight To Safety?)

Like President Biden enjoying a barbeque at The White House with a live band (probably NOT Justin Moore singing “Small Town USA”) while Hamas declared war on Israel and Americans are being held hostage with the promise of public executions of hostages livestreamed. Nothing that “Empathy Joe” does ever surprises me anymore, but I am surprise that various Federal Reserve Presidents will speak today while Hamas terrorizes Israeli and US citizens.

It could be that investors think that Talking Heads at The Fed will claim that Fed rate increases are over. Then again, the Iran/Hamas terror campaign against Israel is spookking markets, driving up oil and gold prices and driving up “flight to safety” in US Treasuries.

President Biden called on Americans in Israel to book a commercial flight home, even though Israel has cancelled all flights. Does Old Joe even read the news??

Fear The Talking Fed!

Two-Job Joe! How Bidenomics Is Causing Hardship For The Non-Elites (Top 1% Keep Gaining In Percentage Of Net Worth While Bottom 50% Keeps Declining)

“Two-job Joe” should be Biden’s new nickname for his economy wrecking ball known as Bidenomics.

The economic disaster known as Bidenomics (code for wealth transfers to the donor class) can be seen in the following chart. Non-elite households are struggling to cope with higher gasoline, food and house prices (rent) under Bidenomics.

As a result, the number of people holding 2 FULL-TIME JOBS hit an all-time high of 447,000 people. Biden spokesperson Karine Jean Pierre is likely to say “See? Bidenomics is working! Not every person is holding 2 full-time jobs to afford that Ford all-electric Lightning F-150 pickup truck!”

At the same time, wage growth YoY is crashing from Covid stimulus highs to pre-Covid levels.

And as The Fed prints more dinero (green line), the 1% (blue line) hoard a larger percentge of net worth while the bottom 50% (red line) keeps declining.

And then we have the REAL 10Y Treasury yield hitting 2.4%. This one’s gonna to hurt you for a long, long time.

It is getting harder and harder for non-elites to buy that Ford F1-150 all-electric Lightning Platinum for $94,000 plus tax. And you still have to pay $500 for the Ford Mobile Power Cord. OMG! For $94k, they couldn’t throw in the power cord?????

Does F stand for Failed? The honorary vehicle for Bidenomics!!

Bidenomics Is Working? Economic Outlook Index Plunges To Record Low In IBD/TIPP Poll (Net Savings As % Of Gross National Income Negative For 2nd Straight Quarter)

As Biden sleeps through the Hamas invasion of Israel, that is nothing new. Biden is sleeping through a disastrous downturn in the economy and pretending that Bidenomics is working. It isn’t Joe!

The IBD/TIPP U.S. Economic Optimism Index sank to a 12-year low in October as confidence in the near-term economic outlook crashed to the lowest level in the poll’s history. The survey casts doubt on the Federal Reserve’s justification for turning more hawkish last month: robust consumer spending.

The overall IBD/TIPP U.S. Economic Optimism Index dived 6.9 points to 36.3, the lowest since August 2011. Readings below the neutral 50 level reflect pessimism. The 6-month economic outlook index cratered 9.6 points to 28.7, a record low since the IBD/TIPP Poll began in early 2001.

That means the outlook suddenly appears worse than it was at the depths of the dot-com crash, the great financial crisis and the coronavirus pandemic.

And on the personal savings front, net savings as a percentage of gross national income was negative for the second straight quarter.

Sleepy Joe, wake up! The US economy is slowing down REALLY fast!

Bidenomics Is An Economy Eater! 885,000 Full-time Jobs Lost, 1.127 Million Part-time Jobs Added In September (Mortgage Rates Rise And Are Up 171% Under Biden)

Bidenomics is an economy eater! But at least we know that the southern border is not on Biden’s mind or lips. But as Ronald Reagan once asked “Are you better off now than 4 years ago?” The answer? Most Americans are far worse off due to inflation and the surge in “Would you like fries with your burger?” jobs. And mortgage rates are up 171%.

After last month’s (September) stunning payrolls report, when in our post-mortem we revealed not only a year full of monthly downward data revisions, but also collapse in tull-time jobs and surge in part-time jobs, as well as the worst unadjusted August payrolls since the great recession, we thought that nothing could shock us any more. And then we got the September jobs report.

We won’t spend too much time dissecting the report since regular readers are all too aware of the same old “upward goalseeking” tactics used by the BLS, so here are the highlights.

First, the 336K jump in headline payrolls – the biggest since January – was stunning when considering that it was not only above the highest Wall Street estimate but was a 6-sigma beat to expectations.

How is it possible to get such an outlier print to not only trends but expectations? Let’s try to answer that question.

If, as the BLS claims, in September the jobs market suddenly reversed a year of declines, surely there will be some qualitative validations to this quantitative outlier, right? Unfortunately, looking through the supporting evidence we don’t find any justification to the BLS exuberance.

Let’s start with the Household survey: here instead of a number anywhere close to the 336K jobs gained (as the far less accurate Establishment survey reports), the number of newly employed workers was just 86K, the lowest since May, and the second lowest of 2023!

And since the number of unemployed workers also rose to 6.360 million, the highest number since January 2022, the unemployment rate was sticky at 3.8%, and refused to drop to 3.7% as consensus had expected.

How about the Establishment survey? Well, here too, things stink. Yes, the headline surge was great, but the question here is how much of that was purely seasonals.

The official adjusted data showed this Leisure and Hospitality added a whopping +96k jobs. But unadjusted data showed that the sector lost 466k jobs in Sep. This means that the unadjusted private sector payrolls was -399!

Wait, if unadjusted total payrolls rose by 585K and yet private payrolls dropped by 399K, that means that… you got it: in September, all of the unadjusted jobs came from – drumroll – the government, which added a whopping 984K jobs (mostly teachers).

Translation: for yet another month all the strength in the Establishment was thanks to seasonals and various plugs that made the total number much stronger.

And now, let’s turn again to the much more detailed and accurate Household Survey, where we find the BLS back to its old tricks again.

First, as we pointed out earlier, despite the alleged quantitative surge, the quality of the jobs was anything but good. In fact, looking at the infamous table A-9 of the employment report, reveals that in September, a seasonally adjusted breakdown of jobs shows that part-time workers accounted for the entire increase, rising by 151K; as for full-time workers? Well, for yet another month, this number dropped, sliding by 22K in September.

Indeed, as shown in the chart below, while part-time workers rose for the third consecutive month to 27.336 million,and the highest since January, full-time workers have decline for three straight months, and at 134.167 million, this was the lowest number going back to February!

But hold on, you say, why use Seasonally Adjusted number when we already noted above that there continue to be chronic issues with the BLS’ seasonal adjustments in the post-covid era. True, so let’s use unadjusted numbers instead. What do we get?

Well, we get the following whopper: in September, the number of unadjusted full-time workers collapsed by 885K. This was the biggest monthly drop since – drumroll- April 2020 when the economy was shut down!

And if full-time workers plunged, that must mean that part-timers exploded, right? Why yes, they did: by 1.127 million in one month to be precise, and at 27.109 million the number of part-time workers was the highest since April.

Finally, let’s not forget the number of multiple jobholders: those unlucky souls which have to work not one but two (or more) jobs to make ends meet under Bidenomics. Also, multiple jobholders (which are measured by the Household Survey) are double, and triple- counted when it comes to the Establishment Survey. So how did thy do in September? Well, on a seasonally adjusted basis, the number increased by 123K to 8.151 million, the highest since January 2020. As for the much more accurate, unadjusted number, well that soared from 7.778 million to 8.146 million, an increase of 368K, or more than all the 336K payrolls reported by the establishment survey.

In other words, all of the job gains in September were either from part-time workers or multiple jobholders forced to get another job in addition to their current one, and thus be counted by the BLS as two distinct jobs (or more). One final observation on the multiple jobholders: in September, the subset of multiple jobholders who held both a primary and secondary full-time job just hit an all time high.

Visually, this is what September’s “stunning” jobs report really looked like.

Source for everything: BLS, but one needs to do some actual work to get a sense of what is really going on.

And on top of the blood curdling jobs report, mortgage rates rates and are up 171% under Bidenomics.

And then we have Hillary Clinton pulling a Pol Pot and suggesting de-programming of Trump supporters like in the movie “The Killing Fields.” Pol Clinton??

Hey Bartender! US Economy Adds 336k Jobs, But Full-time Jobs Declined By -22k While Part-time Jobs Increased By 151k (Leisure And Hospitality Added 96,000 Jobs In September) 

Hey Bartender! The leading employment gain under Bidenomics was … low paying leisure and hospitality jobs at 96k jobs added.

The US added a whopping 336K jobs, the highest monthly increase since January. This is surprising given that the ADP report was so weak.

And the BLS decided to UPWARD revised past numbers. The BLS revised not only August but also July higher: the change in total nonfarm payroll employment for July was revised up by 79,000, from +157,000 to +236,000, and the change for August was revised up by 40,000, from +187,000 to +227,000. With these revisions, employment in July and August combined is 119,000 higher than previously reported.

Meanwhile wage growth continued to cool, and in September average hourly earnings increased 0.2%, below the 0.3% expected, and resulted in a 4.2% increase YoY, down from 4.3% in August…

… as a result of a big bump in lower paying jobs.

But perhaps the most remarkable divergence in the report is that with headline payrolls surging 336K (establishment survey), the Household Survey indicated that the pain continues, as the number of people employed not only rose by less than 100K (86K to be precise), but it was all part-time workers, which increased by 151K. Full-time workers? Why, they dropped by 22K, and the lowest since February.

Leisure and hospitality added 96,000 jobs in September, above the average monthly gain of 61,000 over the prior 12 months. 

But the jobs report highlights Bidenomics. Lots of government jobs and the private sector getting crushed. +1 million government jobs, -400K non-government.

Hmm. How will The Federal Reserve view this report? Focus on the red-hot headline gain of 336k job added or the fact that it is mostly part-time jobs added? Odds of a rate HIKE rise to 44% after September jobs report and Fed PAUSE expectations have been extended.

After the jobs report, the US Treasury 10Y yield soared.

The 10-year Treasury yield has risen dramatically under Biden’s Reign of (Economic) Error.

Bizarro World! How the Fed Destroyed the Housing Market and Created Inflation in Pictures

Thanks to Mish (Mike Shedlock) for this wonderful piece!

The Fed erroneously does not consider rising home prices as inflation. Here’s the result in pictures.

Case-Shiller national and 10-city home prices vs CPI, Rent, and Owners’ Equivalent Rent

Chart Note

  • Case-Shiller measures repeat sales of the same home over time. This ensures an accurate comparison of room size, yard size, and amenities. The only drawback is the data lags a bit. The most current data is from July representing transactions in May and June.
  • OER stands for Owners’ Equivalent Rent. It’s the price of rent one would pay to rent one’s own house, unfurnished without utilities.

For 12 years, home prices, OER, Rent, and the overall CPI all rose together. That changed in 2000 with another trendline touch in 2012. Then it was off to the races as the Fed did round after round of QE, suppressing mortgage rates.

Case-Shiller Home Price vs Hourly Earnings, the CPI, and Rent

Case-Shiller national home prices vs CPI, Rent, and Average Hourly Earnings.

As with the previous chart, for 12 years, home prices, rent, the overall CPI and hourly earnings all rose together. That changed in 2000 with another trendline touch in 2012.

How Much Are Homes Overpriced?

If the 12-year trend of home prices rising with average hourly earnings stayed intact, the home price index would be 211, not 308.

From that we can calculate home prices are ((308-211) / 211) percent too high, roughly 46 percent too high. If you prefer, home prices would need to fall ((308-211) / 308), roughly 31 percent.

Alternatively, if home prices stagnate for years, wages may eventually catch up.

Case-Shiller Home Price 1988=$150,000

The same home that cost $150,000 in 1988 now costs $678,366. But wages have gone up too. And mortgage rates have had wild swings.

Mortgage Payment and Wage Adjusted Mortgage Payment

The Least Affordable Mortgages in History

Factoring in wage growth, home prices, and mortgage rates, homes are the most expensive ever.

It’s actually much worse than the chart indicates because property taxes and insurance are not factored into.

Mortgage Rates

Mortgage Rate chart courtesy of Mortgage News Daily.

Through massive and totally unwarranted QE, foolishly hoping to create more inflation, the Fed suppressed interest rates to record lows and mortgage rates followed.

Anyone with an an existing mortgage could and did refinance at 3.00 percent or below.

This increased “affordability” and we now have two classes of people courtesy of the Fed: winners and losers (existing home owners who refinanced low and those who want to buy).

Mortgage Application at 30-Year Lows

Refinance Index courtesy of Mortgage News Daily

Please note Mortgage Application Volume Nears 30-Year Lows

“Mortgage rates continued to move higher last week as markets digested the recent upswing in Treasury yields. Rates for all mortgage products increased, with the 30-year fixed mortgage rate increasing for the fourth consecutive week, up to and above 7.53 percent – the highest rate since 2000,” said Joel Kan, MBA’s Vice President and Deputy Chief Economist. “As a result, mortgage applications ground to a halt, dropping to the lowest level since 1996. The purchase market slowed to the lowest level of activity since 1995, as the rapid rise in rates pushed an increasing number of potential homebuyers out of the market. ARM loan applications picked up over the week and the ARM share increased to 8 percent, as some borrowers searched for ways to lower their payments.” 

What About the Winners?

Good question. The winners refinanced at 3.0 percent or below. This put extra money in their pockets every month to spend.

And rising wages further stimulated ability of the winners to buy goods and services.

Thus the Fed is still paying for its asinine push to create inflation.

Meanwhile, the housing market is dead and will remain dead with mortgage rates approaching 8.00 percent.

What About Rent?

CPI data from the BLS, chart by Mish.

That’s another good question. For 24 months or so, economists have been predicting an ease in rent inflations.

On September 13, I noted Consumer Price Inflation Jumps 0.6 Percent Led by Energy and Shelter

The price of gasoline rose 10.6 percent, rent another 0.5 percent, shelter, 0.3 percent, and new cars 0.3 percent leading the way for a 0.6 percent increase in the CPI in August.

The price of rent has gone up at least 0.4 percent for 25 straight months. Not to worry, Paul Krugman says this is lagging.

When Will Record Housing Units Under Construction Ease Rent Inflation?

On October 2, I asked When Will Record Housing Units Under Construction Ease Rent Inflation?

That’s really a trick question. For a better question, remove the lead “when” from the sentence.

The answer is: I don’t know, nor does anyone else, although people claim to be clairvoyant.

Housing Units Under Construction vs CPI Rent Year-Over-Year

Housing units from Census Department, Rent CPI from BLS, chart By Mish

I saw the theory that rent would collapse as soon as housing units get completed so many times that I almost started believing it myself.

However, the data shows no discernable correlation no matter how you shift the lead or lag times.

The chart looks totally random. So perhaps rent abate. Perhaps not. The data itself provides no reason to believe anything.

Regardless, please note the floor. Year-over-year rent has a floor of about 2 percent except in the Great Recession housing crash.

And these charts are not imputed Owner’s Equivalent Rent prices for which people pay no actual rent. These charts reflect rent of primary residence.

34 Percent are Screwed

Well, don’t worry. Only 34 percent of the nation rents, and besides, rent is lagging.

Sarcasm aside, the Fed blew huge asset bubbles and did not see that as inflation. Nor did the Fed see that three massive rounds of fiscal stimulus would cause inflation.

Real Income and Spending Billions of Chained Dollars

Note the three rounds of massive fiscal stimulus in the Covid pandemic. This triggered the most inflation since the 1970s. Economists debate how much “excess savings” still remains.

For discussion of excess savings, please see Excess Pandemic Savings, How Much is Still Unspent?

The Fed never saw this coming, never saw a housing bubble in 2007, and has never once predicted a recession.

Heck, former Fed chair Ben Bernanke denied a housing bubble and denied a severe recession that had already started.

Expect More Inflation Everywhere

Unfortunately, Biden is doing everything humanly possible to stoke inflation with EV mandates, natural gas mandates, union pandering, student debt forgiveness, and regulations, some of which is blatantly unconstitutional.

As a result, Fed Rate Interest Rate Hike Expectations Are Still Higher for Even Longer

Looking to Buy a Home?

If you are looking to buy your first home and need to finance, good luck.

The longer the Fed holds rates high, the longer the housing transaction crash lasts. But cutting rates will further expand the housing bubble, asset bubbles in general. And bubbles are destabilizing.

That is the Fed’s tightrope dilemma, of its own making.

If you are one of the winners, congrats. But that extra money the Fed put in your pocket every month may stoke inflation for a long time.

The Consumer Just Crashed! Credit Card Spending Unexpectedly Cratered In September At -10.8% While Bank Credit Growth Goes Negative For 9th Straight Week

Coping with inflation caused by Federal spending (and excessive Fed stimulus) is difficult and eventually consumer max out their credit cards. Like now!

Credit card useage nosedived by -10.8% in September, according to Citi. This is the fifth straight month of spending decleration.

Leading the decline was electronics. The leader on the positive sign was … jewelry?? Hey, I thought mobs of people were robbing stores because they were hungry!!

In terms of bank credit, rising rates to fight inflation, bank credit growth Bank credit growth has been negative for nine straigth weeks.

Then we have unrealized losses on bank balance sheets, expected to surge to $700 billion with soaring interest rates.

On a different note, Homeland “Security” head Mayorkas now claims the US has to build a wall to combat the out-of-control immigration on the southern border. Wait! I thought Mayorkas and Congressional members (angrily) claim the border was secure! It doesn’t matter, Mayorkas is simply signalling to blue states that he will build a wall. But how fast is a different question.

Here is a video of tHe Biden Administration arranging for the border wall to be consructed. Mayorkas will likely call O’Reilly the builder to build the border wall.