Itâs Robbing You Blind Were you forwarded this email? [Sign-up to The Daily Reckoning here.]( [Unsubscribe]( [Daily Reckoning] The Governmentâs Dirty Little Secret - Why governments secretly welcome inflation…
- The unsustainable stopgap keeping the economy from collapse…
- Then Jim Rickards shows you why the market is completely misreading the message of last weekâs rate hike… Recommended Link [[SCIENTISTS SPEECHLESS] Patent No. 11,219,620 B2: The End Of Arthritis?]( [Read more here...]( This tiny stockâs new patent could give new hope to millions⦠and make early investors rich. And it all kicks off with an announcement that I expect any day now⦠when this $87 million company will announce what could be the potential end of arthritis. [Click Here Now]( Portsmouth, New Hampshire
August 1, 2022 [Jim Rickards]Dear Reader, Inflation is often described as a hidden tax on the poor and middle classes. That’s a good description. Politicians know they will get pushback if they try to pass an outright tax increase (although that doesn’t always stop them from trying). Inflation works along the same lines as a tax increase. It reduces the burden of government debt. The nominal amount of the debt is unchanged by inflation, but the real burden of debt shrinks because the value of the dollar is lower. At the same time, Americans have to pay more for everything because prices are going up. When Americans pay more and the government reduces debt (in real terms) that’s the same as a tax increase to reduce the deficit — and that’s what inflation does. The government likes inflation more than tax increases because it doesn’t have to vote for it; all it takes is negligence by the Fed, bad policy by the administration and reckless spending by Congress. And many Americans don’t quite understand how it works as a tax increase even though they feel the pain of inflation every time they pull up at a gas pump to go to the grocery store. Still, everything has a cost whether it’s a tax increase or inflation. High inflation causes Americans to spend more on essentials like gasoline and food, so they have less to spend on everything else including restaurants, clothes, travel, entertainment and household items. Eventually the demand destruction in those nonessential sectors leads to layoffs, business failures and ultimately a full-scale recession. That may be exactly what’s happening in the U.S. economy right now. Technically the U.S. is in a recession right now, but the decline in GDP has been somewhat mild. That could get a lot worse once the demand destruction from inflation and Fed monetary tightening kicks in. One development that is keeping the economy going for the time being is that Americans are trying to deal with inflation by using up their credit card lines of credit. That’s just a stopgap, and it’s unsustainable. Interest on credit card balances can be 20% or higher. Inflation is running around 9% for now. This means the credit card balances will grow faster even than inflation, which will eventually cause many Americans to run out of new credit. That’s when the demand destruction will emerge with a vengeance. Americans will be facing high inflation and high credit card bills. That's a recipe for a much deeper recession, and possibly complete economic collapse, depending on the severity of the crunch. Be prepared, it’s coming. Read on to see more disturbing evidence why the worst is yet to come. Regards, Jim Rickards
for The Daily Reckoning P.S. Last week’s economic data showing that the economy is already in a recession came as no surprise to me. All my models were telling me that we’re already in a recession. Unfortunately, it’s likely to get worse. Don’t be fooled by any temporary market rally. It’s just a head fake to take your eyes away from what’s going on at a deeper level. In light of last week’s rate hike, my team and I [have released an urgent, actionable message]( that I advise you to see before doing anything with your money. It cuts through the noise you’ll find in the mainstream media. [Go here now for the critical details.]( Recommended Link [âThe Situation Is Getting Worse By The Dayâ]( Thatâs what the President of the US Chamber of Commerce just said about the supply chain. If you thought the supply chain issues were over, think again⦠Things are about to get much, much worse. And everything from your local grocery store to your gas station could be impacted. Thatâs why Iâm urging everyone I can to prepare now⦠See the #1 move to make before this problem gets any worse... [Click Here To Learn More]( The Daily Reckoning Presents: âDonât be fooled by the mainstream coverage, the âbuy the dipsâ narrative or anyone trying to call a bottom⦠****************************** The Marketâs Living in Denial By Jim Rickards [Jim Rickards]Here’s what I wrote to my readers in a special report on July 26, one day before the Federal Reserve’s rate policy committee met to decide what to do about interest rates: The Fed will increase the fed funds target rate (also called the policy rate) by 0.75%. Stock markets may actually rally a bit right after 2:00 p.m.… With the “all clear” signal given, markets may continue their recent upward trend on Wednesday and even gain a bit more than expected based on momentum. And right now, the reality is for a bad recession made worse by aggressive Fed tightening. Here’s what actually happened after I made that forecast: At 2:00 p.m. ET on Wednesday, July 27, the Fed announced that they were increasing the fed funds target rate by 0.75%. Stock markets rallied after the announcement; the Dow was up 1.37% on the day, the S&P 500 was up 2.62% and the Nasdaq Composite was up 4.06%. At 8:30 a.m. ET the following day, the Commerce Department released second-quarter GDP figures. Growth was down 0.9%. When combined with first-quarter growth of negative 1.6%, this means the U.S. is officially in a recession using the standard definition of two consecutive quarters of declining GDP. My forecast told readers to look for rate hikes, a stock market rally and news of a recession. We got all three. That is definitely a good batting average for forecasting, but it’s awful news for everyone else. In this special after-action report on the Fed meeting, I explain why. Calling the rate hike was the easiest one. The Fed always tells you what they’re going to do; they are determined to avoid surprises to the markets. You just have to know where to look for the clues (they’re in speeches, testimony and press leaks). Calling the stock market rally was more challenging. My readers know that my medium-term forecast is for major stock market declines based on Fed rate hike actions and other Fed policies, including reducing the money supply by $80 billion per month, about $1 trillion per year. That’s still my forecast. But Fed announcement days are peculiar and often turn out different from the trend. The reason is that hedge funds, investment banks and high-frequency traders all want to react within nanoseconds of the Fed’s announcement. To do this they use robots and algorithms. The algorithms use artificial intelligence and natural language processing to read the Fed’s press release instantaneously. Buy or sell orders are entered just as quickly. In order to write these algorithms, you need programs, and in order for developers to write programs, you need models. That’s where the analytic system breaks down. A model is nothing more than a narrative put in mathematical form. Developers do the rest and then the robots take over from there. But the narrative is completely wrong. The prevailing narrative goes like this: The Fed was raising rates aggressively to beat inflation. Still, signs of recession are everywhere. If a recession hits, inflation will cool off on its own. This means the Fed won’t have to raise as much in the future and may even “pivot” to rate cuts by early next year. If there is a recession it will be mild. The combination of less inflation, fewer rate cuts and a mild recession is bullish for stocks generally and especially bullish for tech stocks. So the robots said: BUY STOCKS! That’s what happened. It also explains why the Nasdaq did better than the Dow and S&P because Nasdaq is tech heavy. There was a lot in the Fed’s announcement and Jay Powell’s press conference that supported the narrative. In particular, Powell dropped hints that the fed funds target rate would be 3.50% by year-end. Right now, that rate is 2.25% after last week’s announcement. The Fed has three rate-setting meetings for the rest of this year (September, November and December). Recommended Link [Trumpâs Final Gift To America]( [Read more here...]( Thereâs a little-known way Trump could â one day â have his revenge. It involves a Federal Ruling he oversaw in the final year of his Presidency that could change America forever⦠unleash an estimated $15.1 trillion in new wealth⦠and create countless ways for everyday Americans to benefit. What is this little understood decision? And how will it impact you? All the important facts are here. [Click Here To See The Facts]( If the Fed plans to raise rates another 1.25% over three meetings, that suggests two 0.50% rate hikes and one hike of 0.25%. That is significantly less than the 0.75% rate hikes at the last two meetings. That was the signal of lower rate hikes (and by implication, lower inflation) that the robots were waiting for. They pounced, and stocks spiked. In effect, the robots and the markets were looking through a recession that had barely started. The robots decided that it was all good. The problem is the narrative is full of holes. Once serious analysts assess what the robots (and their developers) have done, they’ll see the following: • If inflation does slow down, it won’t be for good reasons. It won’t be the narrative’s “soft landing.” It will be because the recession is deeper and longer than expected. If that happens, rate cuts may slow down but stocks will get crushed because of demand destruction, lower sales, lower earnings, layoffs, rising unemployment and business failures. Low inflation is not a free lunch. It means the economy has fallen out of bed. • Who says inflation is going away? Demand-pull inflation driven by consumers does fade in a recession. But cost-push inflation coming from the supply side (energy, food, transportation, supply chain shortages) is less sensitive to monetary policy and even recession. People have to buy gas and food even if they can’t afford anything else once they pay for essentials. We may have the worst of both worlds — inflation and recession. Again, that will crush stocks with the possible exception of Big Oil. • Inflation and recession are global phenomena. They are not limited to the U.S. China is verging on recession because of its absurd zero-COVID policies, real estate collapse and slow growth among trading partners. German industry may freeze in the dark this winter because Russia is shutting off natural gas supplies and reserves are dwindling. Meanwhile, the U.S. is slowing materially even before the Fed is done tightening. The war in Ukraine and global supply chain dysfunction are far from over. We may be looking at even worse outcomes than the list above. We’re seeing signals of a possible global liquidity crisis that could be worse than 1998 and 2008. Investors should recall that the 2008 global financial crisis really started in August of 2007 when two mortgage hedge funds imploded and a major French bank suspended redemptions on a money market fund. Still, the stock market reached a new all-time high in October 2007 after the warning signs were clear. It took another 11 months until the bankruptcy of Lehman Bros. in September 2008 for reality to sink in. Stock markets are lousy predictors of economic crashes. The Fed is even worse. The best predictive tool available is the bond market. Right now, it’s signaling a severe recession (at best) or a global financial crisis (at worst). Stocks will catch up to this reality and abandon the robotic narrative soon enough. OK, so now that you have the details on last week’s rate hike, let’s put it all in perspective. Last week’s hike was the FOURTH consecutive hike. And that’s a very bad sign. It’s an indication the Fed is continuing to attack inflation and cooling the economy as well as withdrawing its easy money stimulus. As a result, stocks tend to crash. Just looking at any chart and you can see that practically every time the Fed has raised interest rates, the market has crashed. [IMG 1] Do you see the gravity of the situation? It’s important to keep in mind that while we may even see some “bear market rallies” like we did last week, investors must plan on seeing a broader, deeper fall in the market. Don’t be fooled by the mainstream coverage, the “buy the dips” narrative or anyone trying to call a bottom. It’s time to be cautious as this market pattern unfolds. Regards, Jim Rickards
for The Daily Reckoning P.S. Last week’s economic data showing that the economy is already in a recession came as no surprise to me. All my models were telling me that we’re already in a recession. Unfortunately, it’s likely to get worse. Don’t be fooled by any temporary market rally. It’s just a head fake to take your eyes away from what’s going on at a deeper level. In light of last week’s rate hike, my team and I [have released an urgent, actionable message]( that I advise you to see before doing anything with your money. It cuts through the noise you’ll find in the mainstream media. [Go here now for the critical details.]( --------------------------------------------------------------- Thank you for reading The Daily Reckoning! We greatly value your questions and comments. Please send all feedback to [feedback@dailyreckoning.com.](mailto:dr@dailyreckoning.com) [James Rickards][James G. Rickards]( is the editor of Strategic Intelligence. He is an American lawyer, economist, and investment banker with 35 years of experience working in capital markets on Wall Street. He is the author of The New York Times bestsellers Currency Wars and The Death of Money. Add feedback@dailyreckoning.com to your address book: [Whitelist us]( Additional Articles & Commentary: [Daily Reckoning Website]( Join the conversation! Follow us on social media: [Facebook]( [LinkedIn]( [Twitter]( [RSS Feed]( [YouTube]( The Daily Reckoning is committed to protecting and respecting your privacy. We do not rent or share your email address. By submitting your email address, you consent to Paradigm Press delivering daily email issues and advertisements. To end your Daily Reckoning e-mail subscription and associated external offers sent from The Daily Reckoning, feel free to [unsubscribe here.]( Please read our [Privacy Statement](. For any further comments or concerns please email us at feedback@dailyreckoning.com. If you are having trouble receiving your Daily Reckoning subscription, you can ensure its arrival in your mailbox [by whitelisting The Daily Reckoning.]( [Paradigm Press]© 2022 Paradigm Press, LLC. 808 Saint Paul Street, Baltimore MD 21202. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed as personalized financial advice. We expressly forbid our writers from having a financial interest in any security they personally recommend to our readers. All of our employees and agents must wait 24 hours after on-line publication or 72 hours after the mailing of a printed-only publication prior to following an initial recommendation. Any investments recommended in this letter should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company. Email Reference ID: 470DRED01[.](