Life, Liberty, Property #21: Federal Reserve’s pause in hiking interest rates is unlikely to avert a recession.
IN THIS ISSUE:
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- Fed’s Pause Unlikely to Avert Recession
- It’s All Fun and Games Until Someone Gets Sued
- Jordan Shorts the NBA
- Cartoon
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Fed’s Pause Unlikely to Avert Recession
Federal Reserve (Fed) Chair Jerome Powell on Wednesday announced the central bank will pause its program of increasing interest rates, which has been in place for a year in an effort to reduce inflation to a target rate of 2 percent (though it is not, in fact, a “target”).
Inflation has slowed significantly and may in fact have already reversed, as Cato Institute Senior Fellow Alan Reynolds notes:
Suppose reporters once again hear the familiar grumbling about how ‘stubborn’ inflation is, and about how worried the Fed still is about the long, dark road ahead. I[f] so, couldn’t some brave soul ask Chairman Powell to explain this sticky and stubborn (downward) trend of the Producer Price Index?
Speculation is that Powell’s use of the word “skip” to describe the Fed’s decision to refrain from hiking the Fed Funds Rate (and hence interest rates across the board) in June revealed a determination to resume raising interest rates next month. The Fed’s projections affirm that conclusion, The Wall Street Journal reports:
Powell’s phrasing during a press conference hinted that his default position for now is to raise rates at the Fed’s July 25-26 meeting, some said.
Fed officials’ new economic projections released Wednesday showed 12 of 18 expected to raise rates at least two more times this year to fight inflation, up from four officials in March.
The Fed is holding steady at the highest target rate since 2007, which was followed by a historic liquidity crisis and recession, as this graph from CNBC illustrates:
The expected July increase would push the target interest rate to its highest point in 22 years.
Unfortunately, even that is not enough for the Fed. The Epoch Times reports:
The [Fed’s] Survey of Economic Projections (SEP) shows that officials anticipate the policy rate to rise to a median of 5.6 percent by the end of 2023. …
“The Fed caused heartburn with their estimates of future rates, implying their concern for high inflation outweighs the softening in growth we are experiencing,” Jeff Klingelhofer, co-head of investments at Thornburg Investment Management, said in a note. “The most concerning data point for markets is the significant rise in the ending target for the Federal Funds rate, which moved up a full 50 basis points to 5.6 [percent].”
Powell told the press the Fed will adhere to those high interest rates for another two years:
[S]ince we’re probably going to—we’re having real rates that are going to have to be meaningfully positive, and significantly so, for us to get inflation down, that probably means—that certainly means that it will be appropriate to cut rates at such time as inflation is coming down really significantly. And, again, we’re talking about a couple years out, I think.
As anyone can see, not a single person on the committee wrote down a rate cut this year, nor do I think it is at all likely to be appropriate, if you think about it. Inflation has not really moved down. It has not so far reacted much to our—to our existing rate hikes and so we’re going to have to keep at it.
As I noted above, however, inflation has in fact “reacted much” to the rate hikes, and the latter are already damaging the economy, an effect which will increase regardless of what the Fed might do in the coming months. An additional two years of this would be absurd.
I believe that the Fed has already accomplished what monetary policy can do in taming inflation and that we are now simply awaiting the full effects of its rate hikes as the natural time lags for central bank monetary action come to pass.
Although the U.S. stock markets have been bullish lately, the data are showing increasing signs of weakness in the economy. The Fed’s goal has been to manage a “soft landing” from the recent bout of inflation, slowing excessive money growth without crashing the economy. Indications are that the Fed has failed to avert a downturn and has in fact created one—unnecessarily, as always.
Manufacturing has been slowing “notably,” Bloomberg reports: “Factory output barely rose in May, according to Fed data, suggesting manufacturers are growing cautious in the face of tepid global demand and equipment spending.”
Consumer spending is still growing, by contrast, The Wall Street Journal reports:
Consumers spent a seasonally adjusted 0.3% more in May at retail stores, restaurants and online, following April’s strong 0.4% advance, the Commerce Department said Thursday. That growth reflected robust hiring and rising wages that pumped up incomes in recent months, further defying recession predictions in early 2023.
“The recession will be delayed as long as consumers continue to spend,” Oren Klachkin, an economist at Oxford Economics, wrote in a note.
If consumers spend more while production of goods decreases, inflation could increase as consumer money chases supply-side shortages—unless people choose to move their purchases into services, which is what the consumer spending numbers are showing. In addition, a rise in imports of goods would also hold down inflation. Thus, the numbers do not indicate a resumed threat of inflation.
Recession is the real threat. Writing at ZeroHedge, Bloomberg macro strategist Simon White says recent economic data are sending an “ever stronger recessionary signal.” With unemployment claims rising in the nation as a whole, the number of states with worsening unemployment indicates the problem is widespread, which White plausibly says is a strong indicator that the economy is about to contract:
In this week’s data we saw another rise in unemployment claims to almost two-year highs. But it’s the underlying picture that’s sending the ever-stronger recessionary signal. The number of states with deteriorating claims continues to rise and is consistent with a near-term downturn.
The month-on-month figures beat or met expectations, but that should not distract from their clear downward trend. Moreover, trying to figure out what is going to happen has more utility than focusing on a short-term volatile figure. Tighter credit conditions posit that retail sales will continue to weaken through the rest of the year.
White argues that the evidence of an imminent economic downturn indicates that the Fed will not raise interest rates in July and will in fact cut the federal funds rate.
That would in fact be the wise course, and I have advocated it for months now. Unfortunately, I do not believe that the Fed will take that advice. What Powell said about keeping interest rates up for two more years is all too credible. The Fed always keeps interest rates too high for too long, until the resulting recession “squeezes the inflation out of the economy” by strangling production of goods and services and the employment that enables them and thereby reducing the effective demand for those things and thus the prices that people can and will pay.
That is a stupid and brutal way to manage things, but it is the Fed’s way.
Sources: Twitter; The Wall Street Journal; CNBC; The Epoch Times; The Wall Street Journal; Bank of England; Bloomberg; The Wall Street Journal; ZeroHedge; The Federal Reserve
It’s All Fun and Games Until Someone Gets Sued
An important but underappreciated reason for the transgender phenomenon and the increasing targeting of children for surgical procedures is the colossal amount of money doctors, hospitals, other medical professionals, pharmaceutical companies, pharmacies, pharmacists, psychological counselors, and others stand to gain. For example, transgender people must take expensive hormone treatments for the rest of their lives—a reliable revenue stream that pharma companies encourage by promoting the transgender movement.
These treatments are not without risks and unhappy side effects, however, to say the least, and it was inevitable the providers and enablers of transgender transitions would end up being called to account by the one group of people they cannot buy off with lobbying and public relations: their customers. That day has come, The Epoch Times reports:
A hospital and doctors in California are facing a new lawsuit for removing the breasts of a 13-year-old girl after she claimed she was a boy.
The defendants carried out “ideological and profit-driven medical abuse” when they prescribed her puberty blockers and hormones and, later, performed a double mastectomy, Charles LiMandri, one of the lawyers representing the plaintiff, Layla Jane, said in a statement. …
The hormones and puberty blockers were given based on a single, 75-minute session with Susanne Watson, a psychologist, according to the suit. Dr. Winnie Tong, a plastic surgeon, concluded after a 30-minute session that Jane could have her breasts removed.
“Defendants did not question, elicit, or attempt to understand the psychological events that led Kayla to the mistaken belief that she was transgender, nor did they evaluate, appreciate, or treat her multi-faceted presentation of co-morbid symptoms,” the suit reads.
The doctors and institutions involved in Kayla’s (a pseudonym) procedure are now facing blowback for performing an obviously drastic procedure on a troubled adolescent:
The defendants are Kaiser Foundation Hospitals and the Permanente Medical groups, both part of the nonprofit Kaiser Permanente; Watson; and doctors who work for or are affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.
The tort system is an appropriate venue in which to determine difficult questions of this type. If transgender therapy is both beneficial and harmless, those behind it have nothing to fear. These cases indicate that there may be much for them to be concerned about.
This is in fact at least the second such lawsuit filed this year, The Epoch Times reports. I believe that these are just the first of what will turn out to be many such cases.
Sources: The Epoch Times; The Daily Signal
Jordan Shorts the NBA
Jordan is going to make a huge profit on his investment. He bought the team for around $275 million in 2010, and it is now worth some $3 billion.
The AP’s story on the subject—reprinted at the NBA’s website—emphasized the team’s lack of on-court success during Jordan’s tenure as owner:
For as great as Jordan was on the court—national champion at North Carolina, two-time Olympic gold medalist, six-time NBA champion and in the never-ending conversation for best player ever—the Hornets never reached a championship level during his time as the owner.
Charlotte went 423-600 in his 13 seasons in charge, the 26th-best record over that span. It never won a playoff series in that time and hasn’t even been to the postseason in the last seven seasons.
The AP story also foregrounds the fact that Jordan’s selling of the franchise—in which he plans to retain a minority financial interest—means that the league will have no black owners. Approximately 72 percent of the players in the league are black. NBA President Adam Silver said he wants to have more black owners, while arguing there is little he can do about it:
“I would love to have better representation in terms of principal governors,” Silver said. “It’s a marketplace. It’s something that if we were expanding that the league would be in a position to focus directly on that, but in individual team transactions, the market takes us where we are.”
The league could block sales of its franchises, but of course Silver and the owners recognize limiting ownership to blacks for even a few franchise sales would reduce the teams’ monetary values radically, by severely driving down the number of potential buyers. The NBA’s owners and league offices are not stupid, merely opportunistic and driven by woke public relations concerns.
It was inevitable, of course, that the media reports on Jordan’s team sale would stress the Hornets’ poor win-loss record under his ownership—a legitimate point—and the upcoming lack of a black team owner. The latter is of course a political and cultural obsession among the nation’s most powerful media vendors.
The race angle, however, distracts from a more interesting observation: the fact that Jordan, a highly savvy businessman, is shorting the NBA. One of the league’s most successful players of all time is pulling his money out of team ownership in the league where he made his name.
The NBA has long been the “wokest” sports league and has befriended the Chinese Communist Party in pursuit of foreign money, while increasingly ignoring and directly affronting its U.S. fan base.
Jordan once said that he was staying out of politics as a player because “Republicans buy sneakers too,” referring to his extremely lucrative endorsement of Nike shoes and sportswear, along with many other commercial activities. The one thing that is certain about the NBA today is that it does not seem to care that Republicans buy tickets and watch television sports too.
The real lesson here is obvious once you look beyond the race issue. Jordan could easily afford to keep his majority stake in the Charlotte Hornets. He has in fact increased his portfolio by a couple of billion dollars by owning the team—thus far. That steady rise in value is about to end, solely because the NBA has chosen to reject its fan base and chase after a new one—like the corporate owners of Bud Light.
Jordan is fleeing the NBA in the wake of the league’s protracted rejection of its fan base in favor of political advocacy and foreign money. The league’s most successful player of all time is pulling his money out. Soon it will be very clear that the only thing that can save this direly woke sports league is …. Saudi Arabia.
Sources: AP via NBA.com; OutKick