The Fed is divided into three camps: Hawk, dove and not sure - they are on the verge of screwing this upLong-term rates rose last week, not a lot, but since summer rates have not been able to penetrate the lows revisited in October.

I would say that confusion about the future course deepened, but it canā€™t get any deeper.

Long rates rose a little after the Fedā€™s meeting broke on Wednesday and it issued another tortured statement, but the rate-spike was the next day, reacting to a third-quarter GDP report better than expected. Maybe it was.Ā In the old story, a person caught by a spouse in bed with someone other than the spouse says, ā€œAre you going to believe me, or your lyinā€™ eyes?ā€

The ā€œadvanceā€ Q3 number, to be revised: 1.5% growth, roughly as expected and unimpressive. However, consumer spending improved a good trend, up 3.2%, and had it not been for falling inventories overall GDP would have grown about 3.0%.

This inventory business should always be short-term back-averaged to find trend. Q2 GDP was 3.9%, inclusive of an inventory build which unwound in Q3, six-month net GDP running just above 2%. The same thing happens with trade figures: if consumers buy the products of other nations, our GDP looks soft but the economy itself is okay.

Where is the income to support this allegedly strong consumer?

On Thursday the bond market was spooked by that strong consumer spending, and another internal element of the GDP report. The Bureau of Economic AnalysisĀ (BEA) said that real disposable personal income in Q3 rose by 3.5% compared to a 1.2% gain in Q2. Uh-oh. The only reason the Fed has held back from liftoff has been dead incomes. If they are rising, the wolf really is at the door.

Friday, from the same BEA: in Q3 wages grew by 0.2%, the lowest quarter since 1982. The Employment Cost Index, inclusive of labor costs beyond wages, rose only 0.6%, year-over-year 2.1%. September personal income decelerated to 0.1% growth. Where is the income to support this allegedly strong consumer?

Or the rising prices, if the consumer is spending beyond production? The Q3 personal consumption expenditure GDP deflator (apologies — the Fedā€™s favorite, ā€œdeflatesā€ nominal GDP to an after-inflation figure) was 1.2%, and in September decelerated to 0.1% — not a hell of a lot more than half of the Fedā€™s target.

Confirmations from other data? Orders for durable goods tanked, September down .4%, and August revised down from zero to minus .9%, probably related to a strong dollar.

Housing data

Housing data is okay, but slowing in both volume and price gains. Housing data sources are unreliable, but there is no inflation to be feared from home prices rising somewhere between 3% and 5%, depending on the estimator. Rising prices and low inventory should encourage construction, but itā€™s still slow relative to pent-up demand, except for apartments.

The Fed is divided into 3 camps: Hawk, dove and not sure – they are on the verge of screwing this up

Back to the Fed. Post-meeting statements began under Greenspan in February 1994, over his objection. Previously the Fed announced policy changes only by the actions of its traders — you figure out what we have in mind. That first post-meeting statement was 99 words; on Wednesday the Fed issued 515, murky and pointless rambling. Strunk & White, The Elements of Style: ā€œVigorous writing is concise. Remove unnecessary words.ā€ I should send my Dadā€™s tattered copy to Yellen.

On Wednesday the Fed took out the only worthwhile sentence from the prior meetingā€™s statement: ā€œRecent global economic and financial developments may restrain economic activity somewhat and are likely to put further downward pressure on inflation in the near term.ā€

Any economic observer knows that the world outside the U.S. is in trouble and exerting deflationary pressure here. What, that no longer matters?

I like Yellen, always have, and respect many of her colleagues. The Fed is divided into three camps, hawk, dove, and not sure — and the camps are farther apart than any time in my memory.

They are on the edge of screwing this up.

If the economy continues at its current pace, the risks of tightening far outweigh the risks of not. And if the economy decelerates as it appeared August-September, they and all of this ā€œWolf!ā€ will look silly. And thatā€™s unfortunate for all of us. Either way.

————————————————-

Link to the first-ever post-meeting statement in February 1994 (by the way, followed by the most extreme tightening since 1981, which youā€™d never guess from this statement):
Wednesdayā€™s run-on statement:

10-year T-note this past week. GDP damage Thursday clear, and second thoughts today after more income and inflation data:

10-year T-note this past week. GDP damage Thursday clear, and second thoughts today after more income and inflation data:

10-year T-note in the last year:

10-year T-note in the last year:

Fed-predicting 2-year T-note in the last year. These traders are not stupid, so yields rose after the Fedā€™s latest wolf cry, but theyā€™ve priced-in perhaps one hike in the next two years:

Fed-predicting 2-year T-note in the last year. These traders are not stupid, so yields rose after the Fedā€™s latest wolf cry, but theyā€™ve priced-in perhaps one hike in the next two years:

Categories | Article | Topics
Tags |
  • Danny Johnson

    Danny Johnson has flipped hundreds of houses over the last 11+ years in San Antonio, Texas. He blogs about flipping houses at FlippingJunkie.com and is the author of "Flipping Houses Exposed: 34 Weeks in the Life of a Successful House Flipper," a best-selling book on Amazon. He also provides real estate investor websites atĀ www.LeadPropeller.com.

Related Posts

0 Comments

Submit a Comment