Stocks Have Hard Day – Just Volatility, or the Recession Knocking?

crystal ball stock market economy

Stocks had a pretty big selloff today in response to a big drop in the bond markets. For those of you keeping score (the baseball kind, not just the points scored), here is the way the game looks so far. Check out my review of Credit Karma. US economy is still expanding, making it one of the longest economic expansions The economy itself is cyclical. It ALWAYS goes up AND down. So, if it has been going up for a very long time, sooner or later, there will need to be a correction, or recession. How hard the recession ends up being is a function of how it hits. A “pop” leads to a hard (potentially shorter) recession. A “soft landing” means markets can regroup and reprice (usually with a lot of sideways movement) without shocking the system. The Fed keeps raising interest rates because… well, because they want to be “hawks” and not “doves” and just for the barest of moments, the supposed “target” of 2% inflation was touched, so here comes the Fed. The Fed not only keeps raising interest rates, it keeps saying it is going to raise interest rates more. One more hike this year, in …

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Fed Raises Rates On Schedule

The Fed has been telegraphing a September (2018) rate hike for quite some time now, and they followed though with another 0.25 increase today. They also anticipate a December rate hike still this year as well. I mentioned last time, this increase marks the end of the “free” rate increases that really didn’t do much to affect the economy as the rates were laughably low so much so that getting any commercially available rate meant a lot of “padding” in the rate from the Fed rates. This rate increase pretty much ends that. From here on out, ever quarter percent increase goes right into the economy as an increasing headwind. Between political uncertainty, a burgeoning trade war, and an economic expansion getting long in the tooth, it’s my opinion that the Federal Reserve is acting recklessly here pushing ahead with its rate increase timeline without any evidence of inflation, and no evidence of wage growth. In other words, the Fed is raising rates despite there being almost no inflation. Traditionally, this does not work out for the American economy. Every time the Fed starts raising rate for reasons OTHER than fighting inflation, the result is a recession, often a big one. …

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Are These The Tariffs You’re Looking For?

tariffs imports markets

OK, so that isn’t a very search engine friendly title for this article, and I don’t really care. The tariffs in Trump’s trade war are starting to make real impacts on certain Americans, and the rest of us may start feeling the effects soon. The most noticeable, immediate impact, is that after a decade as an experienced, professional freelance financial writer, it is now necessary for me to be able to spell the word ‘tariff,’ which up until now never really came up except in examples and edge cases. Generally speaking, tariffs (one r, two f-s) have never been the kind of thing that impacted the middle of Main Street America. Now, I guess we are going big, or going home. In a lot of cases, Trump is shutting the barn door after the horse got out. There used to be real, U.S. manufacturers of solar panels, for example. Not anymore. The companies getting “protection” from Trump’s solar panel tariffs (one r, two f-s) are American, only in the legal sense of subsidies and corporations.Ā  In other cases, maybe something like the steel tariffs could save the few remaining stell companies and mills. The second big impact is now dropping …

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Investing For Hurricanes

I usually wouldn’t write an article like this, but I’m trying something new, so let’s do this. Do hurricanes affect the stock market, and the overall U.S. economy? How Hurricanes Affect The Stock Market Like the vast majority of stock market moves caused by news items, the actual impact on the stock market tends to be negligible when measured over any period of more than a week or two. In other words, investors love to freak out about the news, only to forget what the story was a short time later. Weather, like hurricanes, is no different. Check out my Ebates review. Consider that an upcoming hurricane, no matter how large, has a relatively small area of impact compared to the country overall. While a hurricane might completely decimate, say, South Carolina, that impact won’t be felt in Ohio, Texas, or pretty much any other state you can name. And, if we are being really honest, the biggest of hurricanes don’t really do much long-term damage unless accompanied by flooding. Whether it’s Hurricane Katrina, or Hurricane Sandy, the damage beyond some power failures, damaged roofs, and fallen tree branches was all done by the flooding. So, if you want to …

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Interest Rates Rising Into the End of the Year

defenses economy

The Federal Reserve did not increase interest rates at its August 1st (2018) meeting. That was widely expected after the increase from the pervious meeting. Traditionally, the Fed tries not to raise rates in back to back meetings unless it feels like the economy is getting away from them. It allows the markets, and just as importantly, the economic data The Fed relies on to adjust to the previous hike before implementing another one. Rate Hike In September The Federal Reserve Bank did try and telegraph that it is currently looking at another rate hike for September. While the Fed did not raise rates, it did repeatedly say how “strong” the economy was, and how strong all the economic data was. Check out our Digit App review. And, for the first time in a long while, inflation is actually running near the Fed’s so-called target rate of 2%. While the Fed’s actions seem much more like 2 percent is a ceiling, rather than a target, recent data does suggest that inflation is running solidly near the two percent mark, so action is likely warranted. Will Higher Rates Trigger the Recession? Here is where things get tricky. While the Federal Reserve …

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The Fed, Inflation, The Economy

is recession coming soon

Here is where things start getting tricky. For the better part of the last decade, the U.S. economy has been on an expansion back from the Great Recession. Various measures of recovery show the economy having regained its footing and moving forward. That’s all well and good, but it puts us in a rather odd spot today. The Coming Recession Economies contract and expand. Period. End of discussion. There is no new normal, not this time, not the last time, not the time before that. Every economy eventually runs out of steam and pulls back. Sometimes it’s a brutal collapse. Sometimes, it’s a more gentle, pull back, but there will be a recession. On a strict time-basis, this economy’s expansion is now very old. The official start of this economic expansion is June 2009. That makes it the second-longest expansion in U.S. history. On the one hand, YEA!, on the other hand, it’s like your dog living to be 17-years old. It’s great, but you know there aren’t many years left. If this expansion makes it to mid-2019, it would be the longest in history. Before you break out the champagne, you probably want to know that the longest expansion …

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Vacation Almost Over

Wow. What a crazy time to be on vacation. Let’s see… The Fed raised interest rates. There was a bit of hiccup regarding that. In my humble opinion, this is the last “freebie” interest rate hike the Fed has in its quiver. In other words, this interest rate hike probably doesn’t have the possibility of tanking the economy. But, the next one might be a different story. If the Fed pulls the trigger on the next hike too quickly, that could be the one that pops the whole economic expansion and heads us into the next recession. If you are a conspiracy theorist, it’s too late to affect the mid-term elections, but a series of ill-timed rate hikes toward the end of this year, and into the next drops the economy into recession just in time for the next Presidential election. That’s pretty far fetched, that they would do it on purpose, but it could happen nonetheless. (I like that nonetheless is one word šŸ™‚ Also, a trade war! Again. Not just with China this time, but with Europe and Canada?!? Actually, there are a few glitches in our trade with Canada, but this taking a club to some pealing …

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Another Euro Crisis?

italy euro market volatility

Hold on to your lug nuts. It’s going to be a bumpy ride! Italy Euro Politics Once upon a time,Ā  politicians in a given country disagreed about things. Those things were mostly domestic, although there has always been some foreign policy issues as well. What they didn’t used to do, was just throw out wholesale changes to the entire structure of the economy based upon a single election in which one side won 51% to 49%, or whatever. After the Brexit vote, all bets seem to be off in the world of political market stability. Which brings us to Italy. It seems that within Italian politics there are those who are what they call “Euro-skeptics”, which basically means that they aren’t in favor of the Euro and/or are not in favor of all the rules they must follow to be part of the Euro. Essentially, when the Euro was setup, everyone was very keen on all of the benefits a single European currency would drive. And, why not? There are many, many benefits. As with most things, however, there are some responsibilities too. This is because with a single currency not only are the benefits shared, but so are any …

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Trump’s Trade War

china trade war imports

Donald Trump launched a trade war –on purpose– by attaching large American import tariffs on steel and aluminum. These tariffs might have worked a decade or two ago, when both Republican and Democratic administrations were happy to watch American manufacturing gallop out of the country to cheaper producers, but these days, there aren’t many American steel mills and aluminum plants to protect. Still, based on Trump’s limited understanding of the economy and global trade, the tariffs make sense because American producersĀ haveĀ been harmed by noncompetitive government subsides and subsequent dumping. Lost on Trump is that his own companies used cheaper, imported Chinese steel in most of his buildings. Trade Wars Have Casualties Trump’s oft cited target for unfair trade practices is China, although the steel and aluminum tariffs are hardly surgical strikes against the Chinese, impacting numerous other countries as well, including America’s trade, strategic, and global allies. Nonetheless, as far as Trump understands the economy these industries represent real, American manufacturing lost to “cheating” foreign competitors. When presented with the possibility of retaliation, Trump and his flunkies suggest that America can win any trade war. This is 100% true. No country can defeat America in a trade warĀ IF the country …

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Is Inflation Real Finally?

The Fed has been raising interest rates over the last few years based on fears of inflation that never seemed to come to pass. But, with monetary policy still very loose, and investors in a good mood pushing the stock market higher and higher (with a few days of correction last week), the rising rates seemed to have no real effect on the economy. Unfortunately, this is the way economic policy works. Nothing happens, until it does, and then you have to hope that you already got it right. Inflation in January The 12-month rate for wholesale inflation rose to 2.7% for January. That’s a pretty big number, and it’s the first one that actually suggests the Fed’s long feared inflation might actually be real. Before the data came out, the markets (and the Federal Reserve’s dot plot) anticipated three rates hikes in 2018. The current rate is 1.5%, and assuming the Fed follows it’s recent history by raising rates a quarter-percent (0.25%) each time, that means that interest rates would end the year at 2.25%. That’s hardly high, historically speaking, but definately higher than anything this market has seen in a long time. Add-in the fact that the Fed …

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