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50, 75, 100?


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2022 Jun 13, 5:04am   45,635 views  303 comments

by Al_Sharpton_for_President   ➕follow (5)   💰tip   ignore  

This "relentlessly aggressive" stance could include raising interest rates by 0.75% on Wednesday, a move economists at Barclays said Friday is now their baseline expectation.

"Historically, the US central bank has avoided surprising markets – say, by going 75bp when it is not priced in," Barclays economists led by Jonathan Millar said in a note to clients published Friday.

"But next week, we feel, is likely to be an exception."

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/inflation-puts-pressure-on-powell-what-to-know-this-week-162615319.html

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64   AD   2022 Sep 21, 11:24am  

I am saying a major downturn in tourism in the Florida panhandle.

I have not seen it this quiet before, even with gas prices lowered (due to artifical means by Biden drawing down the emergency reserves).

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65   AD   2022 Sep 21, 11:26am  

Al_Sharpton_for_President says

Wimps.


I see the Fed raising the Fed Funds rate from 3.25% to 4% next November. I see them holding the rate steady between 4 and 5% in 2023.

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66   zzyzzx   2022 Sep 21, 11:52am  

ad says

I have not seen it this quiet before


Are you adjusting for seasonality?
67   ElYorsh   2022 Sep 21, 12:03pm  

ad says

I am saying a major downturn in tourism in the Florida panhandle.

I have not seen it this quiet before, even with gas prices lowered (due to artifical means by Biden drawing down the emergency reserves).

.


Same thing in San Diego. Tourism was dead this summer. Bills are coming due and low season has arrived. There's not going to be much for Christmas economy.
68   AD   2022 Sep 21, 12:09pm  

I am listening to Powell on Bloomberg Radio (WBBR).

Powell is saying American businesses have to feel pain so prices including wages come down.

He said wages will go down a lot less relative to inflation decreasing, so there will be a net positive effect to the working class.

We need more productivity gains such as from innovation. Hopefully businesses will feel more incentive to promote productivity gains.
69   AD   2022 Sep 21, 12:09pm  



The Fed raised the rate by 0.75% as expected to 3.25%. This is the highest the rate has been since 2007. The Fed indicated the rate will likely be around 4.25% by end of this year.

Notice Obama had almost 0% rate for almost all his Presidency, yet annual growth averaged only about 1.8% during his two terms :-/
70   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Sep 21, 12:13pm  

NuttBoxer says

B.A.C.A.H. says

Supply chain issues only in the context of demand.

Supply chain issues in the context of raw materials

Ahem, that issue will be fixed by demand destruction from higher prices.

It's all about demand.
71   Misc   2022 Sep 21, 12:20pm  

The 1st quarter of the year had a negative GDP print, the 2nd quarter of the year had a negative GDP print and the GDP NOW forecast from the Atlantic Fed has the 3rd quarter GDP rising .3% on an annualized basis (with more bad economic reports coming before the end of the quarter).

Employment measures are only increasing because several hundreds of thousands of Americans had to get second jobs.

Sure....go ahead hike rates when the US is already in a recession ... what could possibly go wrong ??????
72   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Sep 21, 12:30pm  

Misc says

Sure....go ahead hike rates when the US is already in a recession

Are you a ®ealtor?

Just asking.
73   Misc   2022 Sep 21, 12:45pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says

Misc says


Sure....go ahead hike rates when the US is already in a recession

Are you a ®ealtor?

Just asking.


Nope. Just sitting this one out with a bag of popcorn watching the government make one mistake after another.
74   AD   2022 Sep 21, 1:01pm  

Misc says


Sure....go ahead hike rates when the US is already in a recession


When I listened to Powel on WBBR, he said that 2% CPI was what was guiding the Fed's interest rate actions.

They have a long way to go but I still think the September 2022 CPI report will report between 4% and 6%.

Powell said businesses will have to expect pain and it won't be a soft landing.

.
75   AD   2022 Sep 21, 1:17pm  

S&P 500 closed down 21.3% below its 52 week and all time high of 4818 :-/

The Shiller PE ratio is 28 and PE ratio (trailing 12 months) is 19

Put to Call ratio is down slightly to 0.95 but well above the historic media of 0.7.

CNN Fear and Greed Index or Investor Index shows a score of 31 out of 100, which is near the extreme fear region.

https://www.cnn.com/markets/fear-and-greed

,
76   Blue   2022 Sep 21, 1:18pm  

zzyzzx says

It's 75

Too little to control inflation. Raising too high can’t be possible as well as the gov can’t pay interest payment on massive debt.
77   AD   2022 Sep 21, 1:29pm  

Blue says

Too little to control inflation. Raising too high can’t be possible as well as the gov can’t pay interest payment on massive debt.

.



.
Yes, that's the conundrum as future debt will be financed at a higher rate. Look at how now the 10 Year US Treasury is at its highest since 2007, since the Fed Funds rate is at its highest since 2007.

Its a delicate or sensitive optimization effort as Jerome Powell said the primary goal is 2% annual inflation or CPI.

I wonder how the Debt to GDP ratio will fare. It was about 105% just before the pandemic and was above 99% from 2012. It peaked to 135% and now is around 120%.

.
78   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Sep 21, 1:51pm  

ad says

I wonder how the Debt to GDP ratio will fare.

Trump suggested that doing a haircut on the debt could help with this. Seems like he was a master of this sort of thing with his serial bankruptcies.

This low-probably but blockbuster risk is the reason I never went out more than two years on the treasuries.
79   AD   2022 Sep 21, 1:58pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says

Trump suggested that doing a haircut on the debt could help with this


Trump is not President. Birdbrain is President.

I just wonder how much debt is growing relative to GDP in 2022. Maybe record tax receipts will help to pay down the debt even more in 2022 so that the Debt to GDP ratio at least stays constant.

I hope we can at least inflate ourselves out of a debt crisis and the Debt to GDP ratio drops to 110% from currently about 120% in the next 2 years.

.
80   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Sep 21, 2:03pm  

ad says

Trump is not President. Birdbrain is President.

You missed my point, I think.

Trump is not president, but he was a sitting president. A sitting president who went on record as candidate suggesting a haircut as remedy.

He is not the only one who has suggested a haircut.

Haircuts on sovereign debt have happened all over the world. He was merely suggesting that maybe it's our turn. He's not the first to suggest a haircut and I'm sure he won't be the last.
81   AD   2022 Sep 21, 2:44pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says

He is not the only one who has suggested a haircut.


Not sure as you mean default or not paying as much such as negotiating a better deal like Ecuador's past President Correa did and its current president is trying to do with "restructuring its debt obligations to China".

I'm not sure how that would fare out as far as debt rating and risk of borrowing money in the future, even if other countries are doing it and even if the US dollar remains the reserve currency.

Or they can just cut back on entitlements slightly relative to inflation, as they have been doing for about 2 years as part of the "haircut".

,
82   AD   2022 Sep 21, 2:45pm  

My mom "restructured" her credit card debt. She promised to not use the credit card as she was paying it off. In return the credit card company dropped the interest rate from around 12% to 2%.

I think this adversely impacted her credit rating for about 12 months after the credit card balance went to $0.

Now how do you scale that to the USA as far as its +$25 trillion in debt and with calls for "haircuts".
.
83   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Sep 21, 3:07pm  

ad says

Now how do you scale that to the USA as far as its +$25 trillion in debt and with calls for "haircuts"

It will wreck pension funds.

And remember, the Social Security Trust Fund is the biggest of them.
84   Al_Sharpton_for_President   2022 Sep 21, 3:14pm  

rB.A.C.A.H. says


And remember, the Social Security Trust Fund is the biggest of them.

The fund invests in US Treasuries and so should benefit from the rise in rates.
85   Booger   2022 Sep 21, 3:20pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says

Haircuts on sovereign debt have happened all over the world. He was merely suggesting that maybe it's our turn. He's not the first to suggest a haircut and I'm sure he won't be the last.


So, don't buy any Tbills, right?
86   Booger   2022 Sep 21, 3:21pm  

The rate hike was less than a lot of people were expecting, and the stock market drops like 500 points. WTF?
87   Booger   2022 Sep 21, 3:24pm  

ad says

Or they can just cut back on entitlements slightly relative to inflation, as they have been doing for about 2 years as part of the "haircut".


This is what they have been doing with Social Security for decades. Under report inflation by 50%, then base raises on the under reported number. This applies to Federal employees as well.
88   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Sep 21, 3:28pm  

Al_Sharpton_for_President says

The fund invests in US Treasuries and so should benefit from the rise in rates.

For the new ones, yes. But for the huge bulk of the portfolio of older ones, haircuts will devastate the notional value.
90   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Sep 21, 3:37pm  

Booger says


So, don't buy any Tbills, right?

It's the reason I don't go out more than two years.

Mentioning haircut was formerly akin to saying "Voldemort" at Hogwarts. By suggesting a haircut on the National Debt, Trump let the cat out of the bag.

So now the concept went from an Unspeakable Black Swan to a mere Black Swan. I am willing to accept the Black Swan risk to the maturities I have for less than = two years. But not beyond that.

I made a calculation that if things come to this, FDIC insurance will be more of a third rail than the treasury debt. As was mentioned on this thread, much of the treasury debt is held by foreign institutions. F*ck them.

FDIC insurance, with its 250k limit, is only for small retail depositors. However you can have just about an unlimited amount of FDIC insurance by spreading multiples of $250K around different banks. Even in banks in territories like Guam , PR, etc.

My political calculation is that the government would use printed money to back FDIC obligations. A haircut on treasury debt will threaten pension funds, (maybe) cause a run on the dollar, but will not lead to pitchforks to the extreme that bank failures would. We learned this from other countries that had debt problems during the financial crisis (Iceland, Greece, Cyprus). Their creditors got haircuts but insured deposits were made whole. That's a political guess by me. Some of you guys will shoot holes through it, whatever. It's my guess. Hopefully things won't come to that.
91   AD   2022 Sep 21, 7:20pm  

.

A means test for Social Security would be what I would recommend, and/or increase the Social Security tax on those individuals making $200,000 or more a year.

Hold federal spending constant for 2 years during the increase in the Social Security tax.

Then assess the debt to GDP ratio, tax receipts, etc as part of feedback to the above actions.

.
92   HeadSet   2022 Sep 21, 7:21pm  

Blue says

zzyzzx says


It's 75

Too little to control inflation. Raising too high can’t be possible as well as the gov can’t pay interest payment on massive debt.

Is government owned debt mostly variable interest? Otherwise, rising rates would have no effect on current government debt.
93   AD   2022 Sep 21, 7:54pm  

HeadSet says


Is government owned debt mostly variable interest? Otherwise, rising rates would have no effect on current government debt.


Federal debt issued now is based on current rates, so any debt financed with a 10-year Treasury Note is at the current interest rate of around 3.25%.

That is the highest the 10 Year Treasury Note has been since around 2009.
94   HeadSet   2022 Sep 21, 8:09pm  

ad says

Federal debt issued now is based on current rates

So that is still only new debt that is affected?
95   AD   2022 Sep 21, 8:42pm  

HeadSet says

ad says


Federal debt issued now is based on current rates

So that is still only new debt that is affected?


Yes it is for new debt. Old debt was issued at older rates.

.
96   AD   2022 Sep 21, 10:55pm  

I listened to Powell say that there won’t be a soft landing and businesses will feel pain in order for the economy to see lower prices. He even mentioned wages lowering also but he mentioned that would be offset by a much lower inflation rate.

Powell might as well say that more productivity is needed to get to the 2% annual inflation goal.

More innovation is needed to increase economic value of goods and services. This will improve standard of living for the working class such as with lower food costs and they have more disposable income such as to save for retirement.

But how much of that is attainable in areas were productivity like with home construction do not matter since local ordinances and laws make it almost impossible to get residential building permits approved.

Florida is a lot different than California as far as that goes. Just look at how St Joe (ticker: JOE) is developing properties in Bay County, Florida.

.
97   Blue   2022 Sep 21, 11:12pm  

HeadSet says

Is government owned debt mostly variable interest? Otherwise, rising rates would have no effect on current government debt.

rate get reset to current level up on term maturity for every bond.
98   AD   2022 Sep 21, 11:24pm  

Blue says


rate get reset to current level up on term maturity for every bond.


I see your point so that means the federal government has to manage finances and monetary policy so that interest payments or debt service is not more than 12% of the federal budget. I hope they can grow tax receipts enough to compensate for this increase in debt service payments.

I was thinking about the I-series savings bond as its rate is adjusted every 6 months.

So, if I buy an I series bond now, it will likely go up in 6 months as far as interest payment because by then, the Fed Funds rate (which is now 3.25%) will be at least 4%.

.
99   zzyzzx   2022 Sep 22, 8:23am  

https://www.cnbc.com/2022/09/21/the-fed-forecasts-hiking-rates-as-high-as-4point6percent-before-ending-inflation-fight.html

The Fed forecasts hiking rates as high as 4.6% before ending inflation fight

Still weak.
100   zzyzzx   2022 Sep 22, 8:25am  

https://www.cnbc.com/2022/09/21/treasury-yields-fall-ahead-of-federal-reserve-interest-rate-decision.html

2-year Treasury yield surges above 4.1% after Fed hike, highest level since 2007

Misleading URL.
101   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Sep 22, 3:08pm  

zzyzzx says


2-year Treasury yield surges above 4.1% after Fed hike, highest level since 2007

Put in my brokerage order for that maturity this morning.

According to Vanguard the forecasted yield at auction on 9/26 is 4.125% annual.

I refused to get the two year at this time last year. The yield then was 30 basis points. I got the 2-yr Treasury FRN instead which pays the market 90-day rate on a daily adjustment. So those are yielding 3.17% today.

Monday's yield estimated to be 4.125%, compared to 0.30% a year ago. This represents a 13x increase in the cost of borrowing for two years, since a year ago.
102   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Sep 22, 3:11pm  

ad says

So, if I buy an I series bond now, it will likely go up in 6 months as far as interest payment because by then, the Fed Funds rate (which is now 3.25%) will be at least 4%.

There's no formal linkage between the fed funds rate and the ibond base rate.

The base rate is arbitrarily set by the Treasury Department. Lately they've been setting it at zero.

I harangued on this site that the government does not set interest rates, that those are set by the auctions in the marketplace. I was wrong to say that because I forgot about the rates it sets on Savings Bonds. But those are small amounts, only for retail investors.
103   AD   2022 Sep 22, 10:10pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says

The base rate is arbitrarily set by the Treasury Department. Lately they've been setting it at zero.


https://www.treasurydirect.gov/indiv/research/indepth/ibonds/res_ibonds_iratesandterms.htm#infl

I checked above, and the total rate is 4.81% for the I-Series bond. It is 0% for the fixed rate and 4.81% for the adjustable rate which is set every 6 months. It was last set this past May.

.

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