The question for the Fed is how much pressure they ought to put on interest rates before they tank the economy and thereby kill stocks.
â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â March 9, 2023 |  [View Online]( |  [Sign Up]( The Terminal Rate & The Nature of Things âWhen one boy among a dozen throws a stone into the air, crying out âwhat goes up must come down,â it is very likely to happen.â â Theodore Sedgwick, Hints to My Countrymen , In physics there is a concept called âterminal velocityâ. We could get academic on the subject, but for today letâs say we donât. Terminal velocity, for our purposes, roughly means the max speed objects reach when falling in gravity. The exact number is something like 128 mph. Then they donât fall any faster. Even weight and mass donât matter. If you want to get more scientific on the idea, hereâs a chart that uses a tennis ball: The geeks who are constantly trying to [disavow human action]( and turn economics into a science have glommed onto the term âthe terminal rate,â taking the language from more physical sciences. Yeah, we know, it doesnât fit exactly. POWERED BY RESOURCE STOCK DIGEST US#2 Mining Stock Stuns Wall Street with Ultra-Rare Green-Metals Discovery With markets in disarray and inflation remaining stubbornly highâ¦Smart investors are turning to the global mining sector â and particularly the small-cap exploration stocks that are stepping up to procure the key metals needed in the green-energy revolution. A big focus is on the Platinum Group Metals â or PGMs â that are fueling the global rise in electric vehicles (EVs). Here's one little-known company â trading undiscovered around US$2 per share â that's developing one of the best PGM+gold projects on the entire planet. [Simply click here and the name & trading symbol are yours.]( CONTINUED... In an attempt to humor those who practice the dismal science, we asked [Jim Rickards]( about it in this weekâs Wiggin Session: [The terminal rate]( is a rate set by the Fed thatâs high enough to bring inflation down without further rate hikes. We get to a level high enough that inflation will come down on its own just by waiting without raising the rate again. The conundrum the Fed faces right now is that they have been raising rates and inflation has been coming down. Those two things are true. But is inflation coming down because they're raising rates? In which case maybe you want to keep raising themâ¦Â Or are they already at said terminal rate? In which case itâs coming down on its own. Now the danger is⦠they may go too far. Thatâs the debate with Wall Street. The question for the Fed is how much pressure they ought to put on interest rates before they tank the economy and thereby kill stocks. Seems like a fairly basic idea, but we all need to spill a lot of ink explaining it, donât we? For Wall Street, who is keen on betting, the game is trying to figure out just how long investors can hold out before the earth shifts beneath their feet. Rickards continues: Whoâs right? Well, thereâs an old saying on Wall Street: Don't fight the Fed. I donât think of it as whoâs right or wrong. You could have an opinion. The way I think of it is, I just want to know what you're going to do because if I know what you're going to do I can trade accordingly. If they do what they say theyâre going to do, you can prepare for it. And what theyâre going to do is they're going to keep raising rates even if they're at the âterminal rateâ already. By the time inflation comes down enough to say, yeah, okay, we're at the terminal rate, nice job, it'll be too late. They will have gone too far because the Fedâs always the last to know. The Fed is always the last to know because, by their own admission, they are data-driven. It takes a while to compile the data. Jerome Powellâs testimony before Congress yesterday only verified their numero-centric decision making process. Regardless, we can count among the known knowns more rate hikes are on the way. Itâs only a question of how much at this point, right? Given job opening data released yesterday, also, the next hike on March 21 is looking [more and more like 50 basis points](. POWERED BY STOCK WIRE NEWS Do You Know The Best Place To Find Gains In Volatile Markets? In today's chaotic marketplace, the biggest gains will come from some currently-small companies that pass by older, larger businesses still stuck in a pre-pandemic world. The trick is figuring out which small caps will be tomorrow's winners. That's why StockWire News has put together a special Wealth Building Report, highlighting 3 small cap stocks set to soar in 2023. [Click here for full details and to join for free](. CONTINUED... Stocks are not going to do well with extended, projected and prolonged hikes. Following Powellâs comments yesterday, the Dow languished in solitude most of the day. Today, it shed about 800 points. Like Rickards, the masses are waiting to do what everyone else is not doing. And in doing so, they are doing exactly what everyone else is doing. âThat's a central bankerâs worst nightmare,â Rickards concludes. âPeople begin to say, âWhy should I buy anything? I'll just sit on my money and wait for the price to come down, maybe buy six months from now or maybe wait a year.â Then unemployment goes up, businesses shut down, stock markets crash, etc.â Hereâs an interesting investment âparlayâ in the meantime. Move money into a 1-year treasury. Granted 1-year notes are not that common but today they are paying 5.25 percent. The two year notes (often those cited on the news) are only paying 4.1⦠the ten years are paying 3.9. These numbers mean bond traders are still expecting the Fed to pivot within the year. We personally think they wonât⦠but thatâs why we bought the one year. If the S&P 500 declines by 5%, you get a 10% gain. Weâre forecasting an even bigger drop in the S&P. You can do your own math, and short-term treasuries are paying you to take the risk. Normally, when writers talk about an âinverted yield curveâ theyâre assuming itâs going to signal a recession. History shows it will, but whatever. So, the year of the t-bill? [You can take the spread in the meantime.]( So it goes, Addison Wiggin Founder, The Wiggin Sessions P.S. If the S&P drops 26%, like Morgan Stanley bears noted last week, then your gain is essentially 31%. Granted, itâs very crude logic, it is worth considering. [Rickards said in our interview he thinks Mike Wilsonsâ forecast for a 26% decline might even be conservative.]( POWERED BY VAULT METALS Little Known Law Could Confiscate Your Retirement Savings. If You Have $50,000 or More in an IRA or 401(k), BEWARE! Bail outs are a thing of the pastâ¦Now, the Fed and your Bank are conspiring to seize the funds in your checking and savings account to stabilize the economy. Luckily, there is a little-known tax law â that enables ANY American to legally move their money out of an IRA or 401(k) â tax-free! [This free "Bank-Bail In Guide" reveals the full details behind the sneaky law, big banks are praying you never seeâ¦Click here to download.]( The Daily Missive from The Wiggin Sessions 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 Consilience, LLC. delivering daily email issues and advertisements. 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