Powell Is The New Arthur Burns, Not The New Paul Volcker

Powell Is The New Arthur Burns, Not The New Paul Volcker

Authored by Ryan McMaken via The Mises Institute,

Last year, just as it was becoming increasingly clear that price inflation was mounting, Jerome Powell repeatedly denied there was any reason for concern. He called inflation “transitory.” A few months later, he admitted it was not transitory, but denied it was “entrenched.” Then, by late 2021, he admitted price inflation was getting out of control but still took no action of any consequence. Through it all, the Powell plan was repeated delay and opposition to any lessening of the Fed’s established policy of ramming down interest rates again and again. 

By spring 2022, however, it became impossible to pretend the previous six months of rising inflation rates never happened. In order to avoid looking utterly clueless, Powell was forced to endorse a 25 basis point increase to the target rate in March. But that amounted only to a 0.50 percent target rate. Then there was a 50 basis point increase in May, so the target rate rose to a meager 1 percent. After June’s meeting, the target rate sat at 1.75 percent— a small fraction of the target rates we saw even during the years of monetary inflation and housing bubbles under Alan Greenspan. 

The other side of this ultraeasy monetary policy is quantitative easing via the Fed’s asset purchases of mortgage-based securities and government debt. These purchases were made with newly created money. Although Powell talked a big game about scaling back quantitative easing and reducing asset purchases, actual action was virtually nonexistent, and the Fed continued to print money for more asset purchases into March 2022. Since Powell finally announced the end of QE, the Fed’s assets have decreased by a paltry 0.3 percent. 

In other words, Powell’s Fed is a Fed that does no more than is absolutely necessary to convince the public and policy makers that it is “doing something” about inflation. This is all short-term political posturing, and reflects that fact Powell—like Janet Yellen before him—is a politically minded technocrat who thinks in terms of using the central bank to protect the regime. The regime needs to look like it is “managing” the economy. But the regime also needs low interest rates to keep down interest payments on its massive $30 trillion debt. Powell is apparently more than happy to oblige on all fronts. 

When it comes to actually doing something to address the core causes of price inflation, however, Powell seems uninterested. The plan right now is apparently to trust in hope that inflation can be “fixed” with some very minor tinkering with the federal funds rate and the Fed’s portfolio. And then everything will be fine. 

This mirrors the thinking of Arthur Burns and his Fed during the 1970s. While inflation mounted in the late 1960s and early 1970s, Burns—who became chairman in 1970—chose to avoid doing anything that might upset the inflation-fueled economy that had prevailed during the previous decade. The result was 12 percent inflation by the mid 1970s and an inflationary period that only came to an end after Chairman Paul Volcker finally had to take the anti-inflationary measures that Burns was unwilling to take. 

With his current timid, weak, and prevaricating position on price inflation, Powell is positioning himself as the new Arthur Burns. He’s only interested in doing just enough to get inflation rates down far enough to deflect political pressure from taxpayers, consumers, and others who suffer most from price inflation. It’s nothing more than kicking the can down the road. That is Burns’s legacy, and Powell is embracing it.

Arthur Burns and the 1970s

Fueled in part by big spending on the Vietnam War and on Lyndon Johnson’s new welfare programs, Consumer Price Index inflation rose from 2 percent in the mid-1960s to 6.4 percent by February 1970. At that point, inflation was at the highest rate it had been since the Korean War. Burns, however, was not exactly one for bold action. Outgoing Fed chairman William McChesney Martin had already attempted to rein in inflation with a rising discount rate in 1968 and 1969. (The discount rate was the key policy rate at the time.) As a result, the discount rate hit 6 percent and a recession ensued. Burns was only too happy to bring rates back down as the 1969–70 recession subsided. Thanks to the short recession—and to the usual disinflationary factors such as growth in worker productivity—price inflation temporarily and moderately declined for the next two years. But by 1973, price inflation was surging again, and inflation hit 12 percent in November 1974. At the worst of it, the Fed raised the discount rate from 5 percent in 1973 to 8 percent in 1974. That looked like it “did the trick” because price inflation then fell back down to 5 percent by December 1976. But then price inflation soon began an upward surge that would not end until 1980. The CPI inflation rate rose from 5 percent in December 1976 to 8.9 percent two years later. It finally peaked in 1980 at 14.4 percent. 

In other words, Burns’s methods did not bring inflation under control for anything more than the short term. Nor did Burns’s policies bring robust growth, as the country endured another recession from 1973 to 1975, and again in 1980. Stagflation set in. Meanwhile, the Burns Fed, much like the Powell Fed, sought to portray price inflation as a temporary matter related to short-term shocks. As noted by Ricardo Reis:

[Burns] thought the inflation of 1973 was due to food and oil prices, and the further increase in 1974 was due again to budget deficits (even though those had been small). There was always a temporary shock to explain the persistent drift. Meltzer (2005, 160) describes this period as one when, among the Federal Reserve staff, “they gave special explanations—a relative price theory of the general price level—in effect claiming that the rise in the price level resulted from one-time, transitory changes that they did not expect to repeat.”

Arthur Burns would have been right at home in the Powell Fed, where inflation is to be blamed on temporary one-time events such as logistical supply shocks and the Russian invasion of Ukraine. 

After Burns, 20 Percent Interest Rates

It was only after Paul Volcker was installed as the new Fed chairman in August 1979 that the Fed would take the drastic action that was needed. 

In 1980, the Fed finally began to significantly depart from the policies of the previous decade. In February, the discount rate was raised to 13 percent, reflected in a federal funds rate that briefly reached 20 percent in late February. Not even that was enough. Inflation was still above 10 percent in mid-1981, and it was in November of that year that the Fed was finally leaving nothing to chance. From late 1980 to mid-1981, the discount rate hovered between 11 percent and 14 percent, while the federal funds rate rose to 20 percent in November 1980 and again in May 1981. Neither of these rates would not fall below 10 percent again until October 1982.

By 1983, the inflation rate had fallen to 2.5 percent for the first time since 1967. By 1986, inflation had fallen to 1.2 percent. 

The inflation cycle that had begun in the mid-1960s—”the Great Inflation”—was finally ended, although the regime certainly did not learn its lesson. The Reagan administration soon after embraced big spending and big deficits. The US committed to devaluing the dollar through the Plaza Accord in 1985. The Greenspan era began in 1987 with the promise of the Greenspan Put, promising endless monetary inflation in the name of propping up financial markets. The seeds of the next inflation were being planted. 

Nonetheless, Arthur Burns serves as an important cautionary tale.

Burns believed he could end price inflation through small-scale short-term tinkering that did not involve the unpleasant work of popping bubbles and liquidating malinvestments that had sprung up due to previous monetary inflation.

This, combined with ending monetary inflation, is the only way that inflation can ultimately be “fixed.” 

Jerome Powell appears to subscribe to the Burnsian way of thinking, however. If his comments in congressional testimony and press conferences are any indication, Powell still believes it is possible to “solve” price inflation through extremely mild increases to key interest rates and through miniscule reductions in the scale of the Fed’s portfolio. 

It is entirely possible that this plan will give the appearance of “working.” After all, the US economy is so dependent on easy money from the central bank at this point that it may not take much monetary tightening to bring on a short recession of the sort we saw repeatedly in the ’70s. That’s probably the direction we’re headed in now. 

The larger question, however, is whether or not Powell’s ultramild tightening plans will be enough to truly end the bubble economy that we’re now living in. After thirteen years of “unconventional” monetary policy, countless bubbles have been created and can only survive so long as the Fed keeps the easy money coming. There is no sign inside the Fed of the political will necessary to pop these bubbles. Chairman Powell claims that he admires Volcker, but it’s increasingly clear Powell is really a student of Burns.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 07/01/2022 – 13:45

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Updating Coronavirus Vaccines Is Good, But a Universal Coronavirus Vaccine Would Be Better


COVID-19 Omicron variant vaccine

Coronavirus vaccines should be updated to address omicron BA.4/5 coronavirus variants that are rapidly becoming the dominant strains around the world, including in the U.S. This was the conclusion reached by the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) panel of independent experts on the Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee. The modified vaccines would add an omicron BA.4/5 spike protein component to the current vaccine composition to create a two-component (bivalent) booster vaccine that would be available around October.

Instead of requiring manufacturers to engage in long and drawn-out clinical trials before approving the booster shots, the FDA is taking advantage of the drugmakers’ ability to rapidly modify the new mRNA vaccines as the virus evolves. This approval process is similar to the way through which annual flu shots are updated.

Even better than updated vaccines would be a universal coronavirus vaccine. There are already several projects aiming to achieve that goal. During a recent investor presentation, the Pfizer/BioNTech collaboration suggested that it planned to begin testing a pan-coronavirus vaccine later this year. Considering the havoc wreaked by the coronavirus pandemic and the possibility that it could evolve further in deleterious ways, another Operation Warp Speed aimed at speeding the development and deployment of a pan-coronavirus vaccine would be useful.

The post Updating Coronavirus Vaccines Is Good, But a Universal Coronavirus Vaccine Would Be Better appeared first on Reason.com.

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“I’m A Fan Of Gold” – Seth Klarman Supports ‘Prudent’ Positioning As Goldman Hikes Precious Metal Price Target

“I’m A Fan Of Gold” – Seth Klarman Supports ‘Prudent’ Positioning As Goldman Hikes Precious Metal Price Target

Gold broke down this morning below $1800, losing its modest gains for the year (but still outperforming bonds, stocks, and crypto YTD). This move comes amid geopolitical chaos, monetary policy uncertainty (rate-cut expectations soaring), and recession fears growing.

Nevertheless, Baupost’s Seth Klarman said in his latest note to investors that:

“I’m a fan of gold. I think gold’s valuable in a crisis.”

And we suspect few believe we are not in crisis currently.

So why has gold been hammered, and what happens next?

Goldman’s Mikhail Sprogis and his commodities research team believe a ‘wealth shock’ has subdued Gold’s rally and raised their target price for the precious metal to $2500.

While it is tempting to blame gold’s recent weakness on a lack of investment demand due to higher US rates, we view gold’s sell-off this quarter as in line with a weaker CNY and primarily reflecting the impact of lockdowns on the Chinese economy.

There is little doubt to us that Chinese lockdowns had a large impact on spot gold demand in China, with gold jewelry sales falling by 30% YoY in April. The re-introduction of Chinese lockdowns represented a significant hit to the Chinese economy and the PBOC allowed for some CNY depreciation to ease financial conditions. As the CNY dropped, gold followed it lower.

The positive news is that lockdowns are easing in China…

This is not surprising since we find that, historically, the CNY has the largest impact on gold among major currencies…

This negative Wealth effect for gold was amplified by a liquidation of short-term-oriented futures and ETF positions,which are very sensitive to trends in the dollar. In turn, the gold real rates correlation remains broken as higher real rates now go hand-in-hand with greater ‘Fear’ of a DM recession which is, on net, positive for gold investment demand, in our view.

Reversal of the Wealth shock will allow focus to shift back to Fear and geopolitical drivers: We believe that the Wealth shock to gold will reverse as China is gradually coming out of lockdowns with growth set to receive a boost from policy support.
 
In addition, an increasing lack of confidence in a US soft landing should boost Fear demand for gold.

Any transparency on Russian gold purchases should raise the market’s conviction on an upcoming structural geopolitical boost to CB gold demand.

In essence, we believe the bullish gold case was merely delayed rather than derailed. Due to little structural change to our model inputs, we keep our gold price upside but delay the price path.

Finally, we see gold ETF purchases resuming now that the speculative part of the positioning has been cleaned up. The risk to this view would be a continuation of the wealth/liquidity shock until its magnitude matches March 2020 or October 2008. This could lead to a temporary fall in the gold price as market participants cut all positions to increase their dollar liquidity and meet margin calls.

We revise our 3, 6 and 12m targets to $2,100/2,300 and $2,500/toz, from $2,300/2,500 and $2,500/toz.

Finally we circle back to Seth Klarman’s insights:

“If the world turns to hell, the war expands and gets worse, God forbid a nuclear weapon is used, I think people are going to say: ‘How do I know what anything’s worth anymore? I’m going to make sure I have some gold because I don’t want to not have money at a time of desperation.’ It may never come to that, but I think it’s prudent to have a little bit of your portfolio in gold.”

The market has come to believe in an omniscient Federal Reserve, and it’s no such thing. These guys don’t really know what they’re doing in any deep way. It’s a giant financial experiment, and we’re at the mercy of their experiment that maybe is right now in the process of going wrong, so God help us.”

God help us, indeed!

 

Tyler Durden
Fri, 07/01/2022 – 13:28

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White House Tells Americans: ‘Suck It Up’ For The Sake Of The “Liberal World Order”

White House Tells Americans: ‘Suck It Up’ For The Sake Of The “Liberal World Order”

Authored by Paul Joseph Watson via Summit News,

The White House has told Americans they must continue to endure crippling high gas prices in order to preserve the “liberal world order” and support Ukraine.

Yes, really.

The comments were made by Biden advisor Brian Deese during a CNN interview when he was asked about the cost of living crisis.

“What do you say to those families that say, listen, we can’t afford to pay $4.85 a gallon for months, if not years?” the host asked Deese.

“This is about the future of the Liberal World Order and we have to stand firm,” Deese responded.

Countless Americans couldn’t care less about preserving the “liberal world order” in support of Ukraine, and would undoubtedly rather put America first.

Indeed, polls have shown that whenever they’re told the consequences of ‘supporting Ukraine’, appetite for American involvement plummets.

But that’s not the view of the president, who also said yesterday that Americans should suffer pain at the pump for “as long as it takes” because ‘Putin bad man’.

Biden once again blamed “Russia, Russia, Russia” for high gas prices, despite inflation already soaring before the war in Ukraine and his sanctions exacerbating the crisis.

A Rasmussen poll found that only 11 per cent of Americans believe the Biden administration’s narrative that Vladimir Putin is to blame for record high gas prices

“The Biden regime is crashing the global economy just to stick it to Putin and they don’t give a damn how many Americans and Europeans have to suffer,” comments Chris Menahan.

“You must be made to suffer for as long as it takes to secure the future of the Liberal World Order and ensure every town, city, state and nation throughout the world can host a Gay Pride Parade.”

Biden loyalists have become increasingly absurd in trying to explain away gas price hikes and inflation, with former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers blaming people who downplay what happened on January 6.

BlackRock CEO Larry Fink also ludicrously claimed “nationalism” was to blame for inflation, asserting, “The rise– whether you call it nationalism or the rise of this belief that we have to focus on communities that have been devastated by globalization, we need to find ways of creating better jobs for more Americans, that in itself is inflationary.”

No one with any critical thinking skills is buying it.

*  *  *

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Tyler Durden
Fri, 07/01/2022 – 13:05

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Netflix Crashed After ‘Stranger Things’ Season 4 Release

Netflix Crashed After ‘Stranger Things’ Season 4 Release

Shortly after streaming giant Netflix released the final two episodes of “Stranger Things 4” early Friday morning, users reported very strange disruptions with the streaming platform. 

Downdetector.com reported a significant spike in user complaints about outages on Netflix around 0245 ET when Stranger Things 4 Volume 2 went live. Complaints about errors with Netflix topped 14,000 at 0300 ET and appeared to have only been a 30-minute disruption. 

Google Search trends show an influx of people across the US searching “Stranger Things release” around 2345 ET Thursday. Searches for “Netflix down” also coincide with Downdetector’s surge around ET 0300 ET Friday. 

What appears to have happened is a flood of people rushed onto Netflix simultaneously and caused network issues, though none of that has been confirmed by the company. 

Stranger Things fans took to social media to voice their despair about disruptions with the streaming platform. 

The only thing upside down this morning was Stranger Things fans. 

Tyler Durden
Fri, 07/01/2022 – 12:45

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Is It Too Late To Short Bonds?

Is It Too Late To Short Bonds?

By Russell Clark of the Capital Flows and Asset Markets substack,

US Treasuries have been in a 40 year bull market. While short term bond yields move up and down on the basis of real or perceived Federal Reserve policy hawkishness, the 2 year yield on treasuries has rarely passed above the 30 year treasury yield.

Looking at the below chart, it would seem like the right time to be buying long dated bonds.

Or to put it another way, when the spread between the 2 year and 30 year bond get close to zero you have been rewarded with buying bonds. Looking at current spreads, that would be about now. Buy bonds, wear diamonds as people like to say.

The final piece of a long bond call is for a top in commodity prices and falling inflation expectations. The Federal Reserve gets pressured to act by governments and markets when inflation expectations rise (as they are now). The US consumers inflation expectations are heavily influence by the oil price.

The problem is that while the US is still the biggest consumer of oil, it is not the biggest importer of oil. That title has been China’s for some years now.

The implication is we need to see Chinese demand for oil to fall, or supply to increase for oil prices to fall and allow the Federal Reserve to reverse monetary policy tightening. How likely is that? Unlikely I think. Firstly, time spreads in the oil market are still pointing to demand outstripping supply (there is a premium to delivering oil sooner rather than later).

The other problem I have is that Chinese economic activity has already been weak. Housing data has been so weak, it probably has upside from here, rather than downside. Cities like Shanghai are exiting Covid restrictions, implying that demand could rise from here, not fall.

So the long bond call is based on a strong historic relationship of Federal Reserve tightening impacting the oil market. With China the biggest importer of oil, is that relationship still true? The other problem I have, is that investors pretty much have already gotten long bonds. The shares outstanding in long treasury funds are at all time highs, while the shares outstanding in short treasury funds have fallen by nearly half this year.

As I have also been highlighting in recent presentations, politically the idea of allowing rising unemployment to keep commodity prices in check, and keeping interest rates low look very unpopular. Policies have now tended to pay compensation directly to the worse off in society, which boosts commodity demand. As I pointed out in my last presentation, motivation is an important factor for me. Given positioning, and changing politics, it does not look too late to short bonds to me.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 07/01/2022 – 12:25

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Xi Hails Hong Kong’s “Rising From The Ashes” In 1st Visit Since Pro-Democracy Crackdown

Xi Hails Hong Kong’s “Rising From The Ashes” In 1st Visit Since Pro-Democracy Crackdown

President Xi Jinping on Friday wrapped up a two-day visit to to Hong Kong which marked the city’s 25th anniversary of its turn to Chinese rule by giving a speech seen as a “vigorous endorsement” of the ‘one country, two systems’ constitutional principle.

He also took the opportunity to praise outgoing leader Carrie Lam for her efforts to “stop violence and chaos, fight the pandemic with full force, integrate with the country’s development plan and safeguard national sovereignty, security, development interests and Hong Kong stability.”

In reality this included a severe cracking down on what were on occasion violent or destructive pro-independence protests, but more importantly the unprecedented imposition of the national security law which essentially criminalized the opposition protest movement, and imposed sweeping censorship on film, media, and school curriculum.

Xi stepped out to a red carpet and was greeted in a massive security presence environment by a very regulated, restricted group of people waiving at him upon arriving on a high-speed rail train this week, which marked his first visit to the island in two-and-a-half years.

As South China Morning Post described of Xi’s arrival:

On Thursday, in a brief arrival speech, the president described Hong Kong as having “risen from the ashes” after overcoming various severe challenges since his last visit in 2017, which proved that “one country, two systems is a good system”.

Getty Images

Significantly, the short trip also marked the first time Xi has traveled outside the mainland since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.

During this speech at the Hong Kong West Kowloon train station, Xi said, “As long as we stick to the ‘one country, two systems’ framework, Hong Kong will certainly have a brighter future and will make new and bigger contributions to the great rejuvenation of the Chinese people.”

Xi’s visit and speech appeared highly coordinated and tightly restricted, according to local sources:

In a veiled reference to the couple years of protest crisis the semi-autonomous city went through which morphed into persistent independence unrest, Xi said, “After much turmoil, people have learned a painful lesson that Hong Kong cannot be disorderly, it cannot afford to be.” Xi further stressed that the territory is now “in a new phase from disorder to stability, from stability to prosperity.”

It should be recalled that several independent newspapers and media outlets have recently been shut down by HK police, with at least 150 pro-independence activists having been arrested, and many of the more prominent activists on the run or in self-exile.

Taking note of this dimmer fate of the city, emeritus professor of politics at the University of Hong Kong John Burns was quoted in The New York Times as saying, “Of course, this is about celebrating the 25th anniversary and all of that, but he is also declaring victory over the pan-democratic opposition and their supporters.”

Meanwhile, a new HK chief executive, John Lee, was sworn-in on Friday, and is already pledging personal loyalty to Xi and the mainland

Tyler Durden
Fri, 07/01/2022 – 12:05

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Brickbats: July 2022


bb2

Craig A. Schmeckpeper, a former physical education teacher in Nebraska’s North Bend Elementary School, has been charged with child abuse not resulting in serious injury. Police said Schmeckpeper pinned a student’s arms behind his back in a physical education class before telling the rest of the class to line up and hit the boy while he held him. Schmeckpeper reportedly said “free hits” and “free punches” as students walked by.

As part of its “zero COVID” policy, officials in the Chinese city of Langfang ordered the “complete culling of indoor animals” of COVID-19 patients in one neighborhood. The order was later stopped, but it isn’t clear how many pets were killed prior to repeal. While pets can get COVID-19 from their owners, the risk of them spreading it back to other humans is low, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Police strip-searched a 15-year-old girl without her parents’ permission or knowledge at her school in London, according to a report from local child protective services. Teachers said the girl smelled strongly of cannabis, but when they searched her, they found no drugs. So they called the police. When cops arrived, they took the girl into a room and strip-searched her, including making her bend over, spread her buttocks with her hands, and cough. The girl is black, and the report said racism may have been a factor in how she was treated.

Paul Kennedy, the mayor of Ocean Gate, New Jersey, has been charged with official misconduct and theft after prosecutors said he sold government-owned furniture and kept the money. Officials said Kennedy sold the furniture through a personal Facebook Marketplace account.

While responding to a burglary call in Knoxville, Tennessee, police officer Cody Klingmann drove more than 80 mph in a 45 mph zone. He was not using his lights or sirens when his patrol car slammed into another vehicle, killing driver Mauricio Luna, 27. Both state law and department policy require officers to use their lights and sirens if they drive faster than the speed limit. Klingmann, however, remained on active duty and the local district attorney decided not to prosecute him, partly blaming Luna for “failure to yield.”

Pennsylvania’s Aliquippa School District has announced it will begin searching students’ bags and will confiscate and throw away “excessive amounts” of snacks. In a Facebook post, the school district said each student will be limited to one four-ounce bag of chips and one beverage of no more than 20 ounces. Superintendent Phillip K. Woods said students were bringing snacks to school to sell or trade, and the policy is aimed at reducing that activity.

Police Sergeant Donnie Dinnell of Fresno, California, has been charged with robbery, illegal possession of meth, and a DUI after police say he stole drugs from a suspect, used them, and then crashed his patrol car into a tree in the department’s parking lot.

A jury found former San Angelo, Texas, police chief Tim Vasquez guilty in March of receipt of a bribe by an agent of an organization receiving federal funds, plus three counts of mail fraud. Vasquez convinced city officials to award a $6 million contract for its radio communication systems to a company that had also been hiring his Earth, Wind & Fire cover band Funky Munky for company events since 2007. After the contract was approved, the company then hired Funky Munky to play 10 shows for about $84,000.

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Brickbats: July 2022


bb2

Craig A. Schmeckpeper, a former physical education teacher in Nebraska’s North Bend Elementary School, has been charged with child abuse not resulting in serious injury. Police said Schmeckpeper pinned a student’s arms behind his back in a physical education class before telling the rest of the class to line up and hit the boy while he held him. Schmeckpeper reportedly said “free hits” and “free punches” as students walked by.

As part of its “zero COVID” policy, officials in the Chinese city of Langfang ordered the “complete culling of indoor animals” of COVID-19 patients in one neighborhood. The order was later stopped, but it isn’t clear how many pets were killed prior to repeal. While pets can get COVID-19 from their owners, the risk of them spreading it back to other humans is low, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Police strip-searched a 15-year-old girl without her parents’ permission or knowledge at her school in London, according to a report from local child protective services. Teachers said the girl smelled strongly of cannabis, but when they searched her, they found no drugs. So they called the police. When cops arrived, they took the girl into a room and strip-searched her, including making her bend over, spread her buttocks with her hands, and cough. The girl is black, and the report said racism may have been a factor in how she was treated.

Paul Kennedy, the mayor of Ocean Gate, New Jersey, has been charged with official misconduct and theft after prosecutors said he sold government-owned furniture and kept the money. Officials said Kennedy sold the furniture through a personal Facebook Marketplace account.

While responding to a burglary call in Knoxville, Tennessee, police officer Cody Klingmann drove more than 80 mph in a 45 mph zone. He was not using his lights or sirens when his patrol car slammed into another vehicle, killing driver Mauricio Luna, 27. Both state law and department policy require officers to use their lights and sirens if they drive faster than the speed limit. Klingmann, however, remained on active duty and the local district attorney decided not to prosecute him, partly blaming Luna for “failure to yield.”

Pennsylvania’s Aliquippa School District has announced it will begin searching students’ bags and will confiscate and throw away “excessive amounts” of snacks. In a Facebook post, the school district said each student will be limited to one four-ounce bag of chips and one beverage of no more than 20 ounces. Superintendent Phillip K. Woods said students were bringing snacks to school to sell or trade, and the policy is aimed at reducing that activity.

Police Sergeant Donnie Dinnell of Fresno, California, has been charged with robbery, illegal possession of meth, and a DUI after police say he stole drugs from a suspect, used them, and then crashed his patrol car into a tree in the department’s parking lot.

A jury found former San Angelo, Texas, police chief Tim Vasquez guilty in March of receipt of a bribe by an agent of an organization receiving federal funds, plus three counts of mail fraud. Vasquez convinced city officials to award a $6 million contract for its radio communication systems to a company that had also been hiring his Earth, Wind & Fire cover band Funky Munky for company events since 2007. After the contract was approved, the company then hired Funky Munky to play 10 shows for about $84,000.

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“…And Then?”

“…And Then?”

By Michael Every of Rabobank

“… And Then?”

Thursday was another down day in most markets, with staggering moves in some. US stocks closed down (-0.9% S&P) and had their worst H1 since 1970. How many Wall Street analysts had that pencilled in?

Bonds rallied. US 10s breached the key 3% level, which had been establishing itself as a floor vs. a 3.50% ceiling, but were back above it at time of writing. European bonds have seen a staggering two-day move, with German 5s down 35bp in just two days, apparently only the third time that has happened in 20 years, and 10s down 29bps. That was despite Reuters suggesting that the ECB would buy Italian, Greek, Portuguese, and Spanish bonds with the proceeds from German, French, and Dutch bonds. Yet overall bonds still had an H1 for the ages too – in a bad sense.

Commodities got smacked again and are all well down from their 2022 peaks. Base metals have given up all their Ukraine war gains. Yet oil as the key benchmark is still up 48% year-to-date. Javier Blas from Bloomberg also picks up the Banque de France flagging concerns about global commodity trading, which it calls an “oligopolistic market”, with “potentially systemic importance and moral hazard”, and where “more extensive work still needs to be done on the regulation.” This is red flag that has been waved by the Fed before.

Bitcoin crumbled further below $19,000. The US dollar once again was up sharply, then down again, with the DXY at 104.7, having been at 105.5. If we see another spike that is held even as everything else starts to collapse,… well, fasten your seatbelts. Fed swap lines will be needed.

In short, if you bought stocks in H1, you lost; if bonds, you lost; if commodities, you were doing great until recently; if crypto you lost; if the US dollar, you were fine.

Some of the extreme moves we have seen recently were likely exacerbated by end-month and end-quarter flows/repositioning. So, now on to Q3 and H2.

We kick off with the Atlanta Fed Q2 GDP tracker being revised down to -1.0%, meaning the US *is* already in recession even before we have to worry about one ahead. At least that clears the picture a little.

Except that supply chain chaos may be easing at sea in some places, but worsening in others. As Freight Waves puts it, “The jaws of the supply chain vise are squeezing trade so tight that the headache it is creating will be a whopper for logistics managers this peak season. Port congestion is growing again as a result of labour and equipment inefficiencies.”  More, properly-focused workers are needed urgently, is their conclusion. Indeed, alongside airport chaos, American Airline pilots are getting a 17% pay rise to try to keep things running. Yes, 17%, not 1.7%.

In short, some pipeline deflation is evident – but not in energy: and pockets of structural inflation remain that cannot be resolved by the stroke of any central bank pen.

Listening to recent commentary, the market appears madly focused on the idea that for all of the calamites unfolding around us there is one simple solution – the Fed cuts rates, and soon. Making that call is important, and particularly because it means ignoring what the Fed, every central bank, and the BIS, just said loudly and clearly – that rates are going up a lot anyway. However, let’s presume the Fed and every central bank is wrong (which is a healthy place to start) and the market is right (which isn’t), and a Fed pivot is imminent (which may be true).

My key question is: “…and then?”

Most of the market doesn’t seem to have an answer in terms of the big picture. It doesn’t even want to try to think of one. Fed cuts will apparently make all our issues go away. Yes, a logical near-term response is “go long stocks; long bonds; long commodities; short the US dollar; long crypto; and long risk”.

However, my question is still: “…and then?”

What about Inequality? Energy prices? The food crisis? Regulation of commodity markets? Geopolitics? National security? The war? The climate? How does this all join up, and where are we going even if we do get lower rates?

I cannot tell you how few market commentators are willing to even begin to answer those questions holistically:

  1. because it’s hard; and
  2. because “go long stocks; long bonds; long commodities; short the US dollar; long crypto; and long risk”, makes lots of people lots of money.

So, they will keep peddling their threadbare wares, and I will keep saying “…and then?” until I get some answers like the annoying voice at the Chinese restaurant in that avantgarde arthouse US film ‘Dude, Where’s My Car?’ And ‘wonton soup’, while nice, is not going to be one of them.

To make my point, yesterday saw another huge US Supreme Court ruling: this time to roll back the “administrative state” – as Justice Thomas had flagged in an interview. Specifically, it ruled the Environmental Protection Agency has limits to its regulation of carbon emissions. As with Roe vs. Wade, elected officials now have to make decisions on crucial matters, this time federal not state.

“…and then?”

Which regulator will be next, and which key legislation will then be added to the pile for a dysfunctional Congress that has a narrow Democrat majority now, but which is likely to see a larger Republican (and MAGA) one after the November mid-term elections?

“…and then?”

To repeat another point I had made on Monday, if you extend the logic of the ruling, the Fed may get nervous. I’m not sure exactly what case somebody might be able to bring against the 1913 Federal Reserve Act –perhaps being egregiously harmed by QE?– but if they can, we might find out if this Court thinks the Fed also has de facto executive power, enforcement power, and adjudication power outside of the constitution.

The ECB dealt with similar issues in their German constitutional court case in recent years and emerged even more powerful – but then Europe generally likes centralized regulation a whole lot more than US conservatives do. Yet one wonders how the ECB will fare politically if it starts selling core bonds to buy peripherals, and once we eventually find out how its much-vaunted but even more controversial Anti-Fragmentation Tool (AFT) actually works –or doesn’t– in practice.

“…and then?”

Who knows? But more volatility surely. Does the Fed get to keep control when other elements of the administrative state fade away? Or does the Fed gain greater power via regulation of commodity markets and expanded dollar swap lines (for friends only),… and then do central governments gain greater powers over central banks to ensure national security needs are met?

“…and then?”

We have to look bigger picture. Turkey is to get new US F-16s, and so Greece is to get new US F-35s (partly paid for by the ECB via German, French, and Dutch bonds).

“…and then?”  

Not too far away, and despite the utopian prognostications of the EU’s foreign policy bumblebee Borrell, the word on the street is the Iranians are playing hard ball in the latest indirect US-Iran talks because a powerful clique in Tehran is not sure if they want to bother with the pretense of the nuclear deal or not. People are really talking about the “last chance” for any agreement.

“…and then?”

New Zealand agreed a trade deal with the EU. Yet PM Ardern’s warning at the recent NATO summit –also attended by Australia, Japan, and South Korea– that China is becoming more assertive, has drawn a sharp rebuke, as did the summit’s focus on China as well as Russia. Beijing has noted Ardern’s “misguided,” “wrong,”, and “regrettable” accusations.    

“…and then?”

In the US, Senate Minority Leader McConnell has now threatened to withhold support on the until-now bipartisan US COMPETES Act aimed at helping to onshore semiconductor production, if the bill also includes items not related to the issue at hand. Relatedly, just published a look at the potential for ‘friend-shoring’ of supply chains from China to others (‘Friends Reunited’). The simple conclusion is that were this to happen on even the limited scale we project relative to China’s total labour force, it could transform global trading patterns; moreover, China’s trade surplus would swing to a deficit, leading to lower GDP growth and an inability to use fiscal and monetary policy to compensate without a balance of payments and FX crisis.

Obviously, China will do all that it can to retain its trade ‘MySpace’ as a result.

“…and then?”  

“…and theeen?” 

“…and theeeeeen?”

“…So, we think the Fed will cut rates…” 

Happy Friday, July, Q3, and H2.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 07/01/2022 – 11:45

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/tzALTJQ Tyler Durden