Neutral Interest Rates

on the edge

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell made some very interesting remarks where he said he thought that interest rates were “just below” neutral. This is bizarre on many levels. First and foremost, neutral interest rates are perfect interest rates unless your economy is in a recession in which case you want stimulating interest rates, or if you are trying to control inflation in which case you want interest rates that have a constricting effect on the economy to stop price increases. So, if interest rates were close to neutral, and inflation was not increasing, then wouldn’t you want to keep interest rates at neutral? Check out my notes about Ebates and holiday shopping. But, Powell and the rest of the Fed have been telegraphing a December rate increase as loudly as possible. In other words, event though interest rates are “just below” neutral, Powell and company want to raise them. Why? Economy is Teetering The other weird bit is that everyone can see the economy is slowing down, and quickly. Housing starts are way down. Housing sales are decreasing. Both are very much affected by higher rates. The stock market is falling, having erased the whole year’s gains. Also, in very large …

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Market Falls, But… No Panic… yet?

stock market price down facebook

So, interesting phenomenon happening in the stock market these last few days with the S&P 500 dropping over 5% (around 1,400 points) and even dipping below its 200-day moving average. In the right circumstances, this might be the trigger of a full-on rout in the stock markets. Here is what is missing though: panic. Markets Down – Does Anyone Care? I’ve been subtly (and not so subtly) hinting for about a year now that I think the Federal Reserve is too set in stone on its course to raise interest rates in the face of little to no inflationary pressure. To me, this recovery, as long as it is, doesn’t seem that strong. As such, one rate hike too many, could spell disaster. With this week’s market reacting poorly to rising interest rates in the bond markets, I was dusting off my “I Told You So,” posts. But, it looks like I’ll have to wait a bit longer. My Digit reviews. Despite the fairly big numbers in the Wall Street sell off as late, there isn’t much fear associated with it. When it comes to the economy, nothing matters more than how people FEEL about it. That’s why they try …

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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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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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Yellen Admits 2% Target Is Phony

rate hike without data

Janet Yellen admitted that the Fed’s two percent inflation target is largely phony. She didn’t say that in as many words of course. What she actually said was It would be imprudent to keep monetary policy on hold until inflation is back to 2 percent On the one hand, that makes sense. The levers that steer the economy do so more like those that control a supertanker, and less like the steering wheel of a Tesla. So, the Fed Chairwoman is right that you can’t simply wait for inflation to hit 2% and then start raising interest rates. That could lead to a hard landing, or worse, not work at all. Stealth Inflation But, that isn’t what she meant. What she meant was that there is no data indicating that inflation will be 2% anytime soon, but that doesn’t square with what she thinks is/maybe/will be happening in the economy. You see, she is convinced that inflation is hiding somewhere, cloaked in stealth mode, undetectable by economic statistics, like some sort of cloaked Klingon finance battleship. That seems to be a popular theory because of two factors. One, the stock market keeps going higher, and people are starting to worry …

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Inflation Disappears (Again)

no inflation

Update: Yea! It looks like I was right, and everyone has come around. It’s August now, and it looks like those low inflation numbers were neither an aberration, nor temporary. There simply is no inflation, the job market, while full, is not hot, and there is no need to raise rates the rest of 2017, so say we all 🙂 The Fed has been working to raise interest rates because of the specter of inflation. However, with the exception of energy prices, there really hasn’t been much in the way of inflation. As a result, the Fed keeps explaining that they think that all those reports of low inflation were temporary. That all took a bit of knock today as the U.S. Government reported that inflation in June was zero. That’s right, zero, as in no inflation (again). And that comes after the actual 0.1% drop in inflation in May. This is of course, a far cry from the Fed’s so-called target of 2.0% inflation, and calling two months in a row of data temporary starts to look like ignoring data, so the tone has changed. A lot hinges on the July report. Check out my Credit Sesame review. Fed …

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Mortgage Rates Climbing

rising mortgage interest rates

Mortgage rates have ticked up in the this month. Despite stories saying that rates have “jumped” the rise has been rather tepid, and still hasn’t taken rates back to their post election highs in the 4.25% range. Rates had peaked back in January when some analysts still suspected that Crazy Trump was all an act and that the newly elected President would settle into the office as a regular business-friendly, regulation-busting, Republican. However, the Russia scandal has plagued the administration and health care has twice stalled out, pushing any pro-business legislation off. As a result, rates have basically trended eastbound and down, if you will. Do Mortgage Rates Really Matter? It’s always dangerous to say, “This time it is different,” in the world of finance. Such sentiments are typically used to justify things that should not be justified. However, is the world really different this time around with regards to mortgage interest rates? Consider that rates are still historically low, and that they will continue to be so long as they stay below the 5.0% to 5.5% range. A full percentage point is several Fed interest rate hikes away (a year… two?), or an economy that shakes off its slow …

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Will The Fed Trigger a Recession?

Will the Federal Reserve trigger the next recession? The Fed is meeting and most analysts expect that they will signal that they are making no changes in their plan to move forward with at least two more rate hikes this year despite the weakest first quarter economic growth in three years. More Rate Hikes or Bust The Fed is still trying to work its way out of the “historically low” interest rate environment it has been forced to use to keep the economy upright since the Great Recession a few years ago. The trouble is that despite years of economic expansion, none of those years have come across as particularly strong. In fact, with just two exceptions in the last few years, every time the Fed thought the time was right to raise rates, new, bad economic news came out to derail their plans. This time, however, the Fed looks like it will not be deterred by any run-of-the-mill negative data. Even as inflation falls. Fed officials are blowing off the poor first quarter of economic performance. They say that they fill it is temporary and the economy will recover and continue to grow at a better rate, as soon …

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Best Argument For a Coming Recession

no inflation

Recently, I wrote about how lots of various financial analysts and pundits predicting a coming stock market crash or imminent recession are more interested in trying to take credit for making a guess than in accurately predicting what the facts actually support. However, there is one very good case for predicting a recession coming in the next few years. Predicting Recessions It is as likely as not that the next recession will trigger the next stock market correction. Of course, the opposite has been known to happen as well. Most recently, the internet bubble popping took the economy with it, when it caused the bankruptcy and fire sale of dozens of formerly high-spending technology companies and sent their employees flooding onto the market, just when the demand for them vanished. On the other hand, the slow motion implosion of the housing market, and its affects on poorly leveraged, and managed, banking companies, followed by their panicked actions to stay alive, is what caused the so-called Great Recession of the Bush the Younger era. Is Acorns safe? Read this review. These days, most analysts like to predict a stock market crash based on “knowing” that the market is over-valued, or propped up …

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Fed Raises Rates – More Coming

fed raises interest rates march

The Federal Reserve raised interest rates one-quarter of a point, or 0.25%, in a widely expected move. The benchmark rate is now technically the range between 0.75 percent and 1.0 percent, although most people refer to this simply as 0.75%. As pretty much everyone predicted, the Fed raised interest rates at its March meeting. This is the second interest rate hike in just three months, and the third one overall since the Great Recession. Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen said, “The simple message is, the economy is doing well.” What Happens Next? While some indicators are showing signs of inflation, there is also an increasing concern that the economy isn’t as robust as some might think. Things certainly look good right now, but few analysts look as this economy as a powerful train moving forward, so much as a boat drifting in the right direction and easily pushed off course. As a result, the guidance from the Fed continues to be for three total interest hikes in 2017, meaning that currently they expect two more hikes between now and December. Just when those hikes will come depends a great deal on how the economy fares. Another few months of good job …

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