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The Federal Reserve Is Nowhere Near Victory The mainstream is optimistic about both the economy and the Fed’s fight against inflation. In his podcast, Peter Schiff took apart the mainstream narrative, explaining that the economy is much weaker than most people realize and the Fed is nowhere near victory in the war on inflation. We’re seeing a Santa Claus rally in stock in January, especially in the speculative momentum stocks. We’ve also seen a rally in the bond market. Peter called it a dead cat bounce.
The mainstream narrative is that the economy will be weak enough to restrain the Fed, but not weak enough to put a big dent in corporate earnings.
We got the first look at Q4 GDP last week. The 2.9% increase was slightly better than projected. The last two quarters of 2022 made up for the back-t0-back declines charted in the first and second quarters. That adds weight to the argument that we weren’t in a recession during the first half of the year. But Peter said he doesn’t think we had any real economic growth at all in 2022. He thinks the GDP deflator for the year was too low.
One of the prime reasons we saw an improvement in GDP during the last half of 2022 was an improvement in the trade deficit. The trade deficit was still huge, but not as huge as before. One reason the trade deficit improved was the strength of the dollar. That lowered the cost of imports. But dollar strength began to unwind in the last half of Q4 and the dollar index is down about 1.5% in 2023.
The release of oil from the strategic reserves last year also narrowed the trade deficit.
Peter said he thinks the US economy will get progressively weaker as the year goes on. The Fed’s favorite inflation number – the Personal Consumption Expenditures Index (PCE) came in at 4.4% for 2022. That is more than double the Fed’s 2% target. But because it is closer to 2% than it has been in the recent past, the markets view it as a positive number. But Peter said in reality, PCE confirms that the Fed is nowhere near victory when it comes to the inflation fight.
Two things need to happen in order to beat inflation. We need positive real interest rates — an interest rate above the CPI. And we also need the US government to cut spending and stop running huge budget deficits. A Fed paper admitted that it can’t tame inflation with monetary policy alone, saying, “When the fiscal authority [the federal government] is not perceived as fully responsible for covering the existing fiscal imbalances, the private sector expects that inflation will rise to ensure sustainability of national debt.” Neither of these things will likely happen. That means the Fed can’t possibly win this war. It might be able to brag about “progress,” but it is doomed to fail. In this podcast, Peter Schiff also talks politics, including the government going after Google’s so-called monopoly and a plan in San Francisco to incentivize African-American drug use.”
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