Just within the last day we've seen our esteemed Slumberer-in-Chief rail against the Fed, saying it needs to get on the ball and do something about all this inflation.
Well, yes -- at least insofar as the Fed effected all the bond-buying that enabled Congress to pass (and Joey to sign) the additional multitrillion-dollar spending measures that replaced estimated loss wage and salary income several times over.
Perhaps it's useful to ask a couple of "what if" questions.
For instance, what if the Fed begins tightening right into the jaws of the inevitable withdrawal of massive fiscal surge spending? What if demand for durable goods in large swaths of the economy is already weakening? (It is, actually.)
What if tightening pushes the 10y UST yield above 3% during the next 12-18 months? (It's been as high as about 3.2% on a couple of post-GFC occasions.)
That would imply 30-year fixed mortgage rates pushing 5%.
They're already climbing:
https://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/ma...rates-02162022
What if this causes the housing market, one of the key drivers of growth during the last two years, to weaken markedly in the face of rising rates?
What if this is the fakest economic "expansion" or "recovery" in US history and simply rests on a foundation of soft sand? (Well, this is surely the most medicated, stimulated economy in memory.)
What if about 20% of S&P 500 companies are essentially "zombies" incapable of handing debt service coverage and still throwing off enough free cash flow to remain viable on a sustained basis in a semi-normalized yield curve environment? (Another fund manager whose opinion I respect put out a note recently saying exactly that.)
That's why I think the probability is very high that within a year the Fed will be under great pressure to pivot back to accommodation as the economy weakens, especially if influential members of Congress start getting upset about a possible market selloff.
(Asset price support is the Fed's tacit "third mandate.")
What if we trade in the current inflation run rate for a big slowdown or even a recession commencing in late 2022 or 2023?
What if middle class and working class Americans are even more unhappy about that?
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