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Based on Today's Report, Powell Should be Biting His Lip on Inflation
That lip is going to be getting a little raw. The rise in inflation that I’ve said we could see by end of summer, continues to look increasingly likely to emerge soon and not like it is going to cut Chairman Powell’s rate cut a break. Today’s US manufacturing report came in at a 15-month low, signaling the economy is not as rosy as indicated.
Manufacturing actually fell way off, while services put in an inconsequential (so far) blip of a dip:
What really sounded off, however, was producer inflation that will be heading down the pipe to consumers, getting worse than it has been all summer.
That scenario is not likely to mix well during the remainder of the year with the Fed’s supersized rate cut as its stimulus laxative slowly seeps into the general economy.
We shall soon see because …
Certainly, not something I remember the Fed ever doing, much less celebrating that high-velocity market with an “crisis-scale” rate cut, as Zero Hedge tagged it.
In fact …
Which looks like this:
An emergency-scale rate cut just to keep the economy perking along when Powell says …
… seems like a lot more than is needed just to keep a solid labor market and an economy that is in good shape staying that way. It sounds more like election-year stimulus to help the incumbent, which Powell would completely deny, or like there is some uncertainty in that economic picture that Powell is not letting on because he has to be careful about what he says so as not to trigger economic downfall. In fact, the author of the article I’m quoting asked ChatGPT what it thought about Powell’s words, and the AI replied that his manner of speaking sounded very uncertain. At any rate, a 50-basis-point cut (half a percent) during “solid” times that are in “good shape” when background inflation has been rising for months on the producer side seems like the Fed still underestimates inflation, just as it did when it was claiming in the face of continuing sizable increases in consumer inflation that it was all transitory and would go away on its own. Well, on a long enough timeline, the earth is transitory, too, so the Fed’s view on inflation wasn’t too helpful. It damaged all of us with prices that will remain higher for the rest of our lives, even if inflation cools back down to the Fed’s norm of 2%. That will always mean 2% of a much higher number on nearly every price, barring a deep recession that is deflationary. So far, we have a stagflationary recession that is staying that way for now. Thanks for reading The Daily Doom! This post is public so feel free to share it and help spread the truth about the facts you are fed by the Fed. The Daily Doom is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
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