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It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so (Mark Twain)

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THE DAILY EDGE: 5 MARCH 2021: Powell’s Non-Put

Powell Says Fed Will Maintain Ultralow Interest Rates Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell reaffirmed his intention of keeping easy-money policies in place until the labor market improves much further, but provided no sign the central bank will seek to stem a recent rise in Treasury yields.

(…) Fed officials “don’t appear particularly concerned about the current level of yields, which in both real and nominal terms is significantly higher than it was two weeks ago.”

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose above 1.55% after Mr. Powell’s interview—its highest level since before the pandemic—up from 1.46% earlier Thursday and 0.92% at the beginning of the year. (…)

Asked Thursday about the climb in long-term rates, Mr. Powell said it “was something that was notable and caught my attention.” But he signaled no imminent policy response from the central bank.

“I would be concerned by disorderly conditions in markets or a persistent tightening in financial conditions that threatens the achievement of our goals,” Mr. Powell said Thursday. He added that the Fed is looking at “a broad range of financial conditions,” rather than a single measure.

“If conditions do change materially, the [Fed’s rate-setting] committee is prepared to use the tools that it has to foster achievement of its goals,” Mr. Powell said. (…)

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(…) Even before the recent climb in rates, surging U.S. home prices had begun to outweigh the savings afforded by historically low borrowing rates. The typical monthly mortgage payment in the fourth quarter rose to $1,040 from $1,020 a year earlier even as mortgage rates declined, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Rising rates can also put the brakes on refinancings, which accounted for about 60% of mortgage originations in 2020, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

With a 30-year rate of 2.75%, about 18 million U.S. homeowners could reduce their monthly payments through a refinance, according to mortgage-data firm Black Knight Inc. When the rate rises to 3.25%, the pool of eligible homeowners shrinks to about 11 million. (…)

John Authers: Powell Needs a Stock Selloff to Act on Bond Yields

(…) Thursday’s biggest development, arguably, was a surprising strengthening of the dollar. The popular DXY index, which compares the greenback to a group of the largest developed market currencies, is now above its 100-day moving average for the first time in 10 months, suggesting that the trend is turning. Meanwhile, the bond market is applying more upward pressure. Generally, as the chart shows, rate differentials tend to lead currencies, with a lag, and the spread of U.S. over German 10-year bond yields has risen sharply. If the dollar continues to rise, a widespread market assumption will have been thwarted. And the stronger currency will itself act as a counterweight against the inflation predicted for the U.S.:

Yield differentials have spiked in favor of the U.S. currency

(…) All the move away from value driven by last year’s pandemic has now been reversed. The market is clearly repositioning for companies that will prosper in a reflationary environment, and leaving those that prospered under pandemic conditions:

Bloomberg's measure shows value outperforming momentum over two years

(…) Remarkably, bank stocks have now outperformed tech stocks since last year’s low (…).

If rising yields spark a significant equity selloff, as happened at the end of 2018, it’s fair to expect that the Fed will respond with extra support for the bond market. But not before that.

(…) the implied rental yield paid by property has moved in line with yields on long U.S. and Chinese bonds. An increase in bond yields that in turn causes a drop of 10% in the level of global house prices isn’t hard to imagine. That would be a wealth effect of almost $30 trillion, or about a third of global GDP, and a sledgehammer to the world economy.

(…) such a decline would inflict one last deflationary downdraft. That by extension means not betting all out on inflation just yet. He suggests the crucial stress point would come when 30-year yields reach 3.75%:

where is the pain point? Our answer is that if inflation fears lifted the average US and China 30-year bond yield to 3.75 percent (from 3 percent now), it would constitute the change in trend that would unleash a massive countervailing deflationary impulse from falling house prices. (…)

(…) This is a clear example of what I have detailed in earlier columns as an increasingly tight corner policywise for central banks that confronts them with an ever more uncomfortable lose-lose situation. This is likely to continue as the U.S. economic recovery quickens, the bond market looks to price in the prospects of both higher real growth and inflation, and the Fed finds itself torn: Should it allow genuine fixed-income repricing that risks destabilizing risk assets that have been driven excessively by actual and anticipated liquidity injections, or should it intervene further in markets and risk additional distortions and damage both to efficient market functioning and its own policy credibility?

The answer to this policy dilemma is to accelerate structural reforms and fiscal measures aimed at enhancing high, durable, inclusive and sustainable growth that would help validate existing elevated prices for many risk assets. Pending this, the Fed would be well advised to the extent possible to follow Burr’s advice to Hamilton [“Talk less, smile more”]. Any other action risks volatility that involves unsettling pockets of illiquidity in the most liquid markets of all.

Punch Bloomberg’s Joe Weisenthal smartly comes to Powell’s defense:

(…) What’s key though is that in the current economic environment, market volatility isn’t perceived to be an economic threat the way it was over the last decade. We’re probably on the verge of another $1.9 trillion dollars in stimulus soon and there’s a tidal wave of reopening spending set to wash over the economy. With this kind of economic tailwind, what does it really matter if ARKK is down for the year and the S&P is flat and the 10-year yield is at 1.50%? It’s not that big of a deal in this context.

The Fed could probably push back on some of the market action if it really wanted to, maybe by talking more about how it’s concerned by the rate rise or some nod to more bond purchases at the long end. But again, since the market volatility is no real threat to the economic fundamentals yet it simply does not need to.

Things could change of course. The economic fundamentals could sputter (no stimulus? unexpected pandemic setback?) or the market selloff could get much more serious. But at the moment, it looks we’re getting the stock market that people always say they want: One where the Fed doesn’t have to worry about every tick down so much, because robust economic fundamentals have severed (or at least diminished) the link between volatility and poor growth. Enjoy it folks!

Jobless Claims Hold Nearly Steady Initial claims rose slightly to 745,000 last week but have eased since the start of the year

The Labor Department said jobless claims, a proxy for layoffs, rose slightly to 745,000 for the week ended Feb. 27, from a revised 736,000 the prior week. The four week moving-average, which smooths out week-to-week volatility in claims numbers, was just under 800,000, its lowest level since early December. (…)

The total number of continuing claims—which offers a good approximation of the number of workers collecting benefits—was about 4.3 million in regular state programs for the week ending Feb. 20, down slightly from the prior week. The number of continuing claims for pandemic unemployment assistance—which provides benefits to gig workers, the self-employed and others not typically eligible for unemployment aid—fell to 7.3 million for the week ending Feb. 13 from 7.5 million the week prior. (…)

The total number of all state, federal and PUA and PEUC continuing claims was 18.0 million in the February 13 week, down by 1.02 million from the February 6 week.

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The aggregation from Bespoke:

(Bespoke)

Chip Shortage Strains Heavy-Duty Truck Makers Surging orders for big rigs have the backlog at factories growing while key components are in short supply

North American production of Class 8 trucks, the biggest freight-carrying vehicles on highways, “has basically been flat since September in a market where more trucks are needed quickly,” said Don Ake, vice president of commercial vehicles at transportation research firm FTR.

He said the backlog of orders at truck manufacturers has grown from 89,300 last June, after truckers had pulled back capacity plans in the wake of coronavirus lockdowns, to 205,000 in January, the most recent month for which those figures were available. Fleet operators ordered 44,000 heavy-duty trucks last month, more than triple the number they ordered in February 2020, according to preliminary data from FTR. (…)

“We’ve been able, thus far, to work our way through the issues without interrupting production,” he said. “The situation is fluid, and we’re continuing to do everything we can to minimize the impact on customers.” (…)

CONSUMER WATCH

More adults in Britain now commuting than working from home

Vaccinated Americans’ Spending On Air Travel Soars

(…) spending on airfare surged for traditionalists as compared to other generations – this can be seen in the chart below which shows the indexed level of average spending by cohort to June 2020; traditionalists – i.e., vaccinated Americans’ – spending is now 4X the level in June.

As an aside, BofA did not see the same spending surge for lodging which may suggest that traditionalists are traveling to see family rather than take vacations. (…)

(CalculatedRisk)

Also worth watching:

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U.S. National Debt Is Likely to Nearly Double to 202% of GDP by 2051, CBO Projects Agency raises long-term economic growth forecast from 1.6% to 1.8% as it now expects smaller impact from pandemic

(…) The federal debt is projected to be 102% of the gross domestic product in 2021. It has exceeded that level only twice before in U.S. history, in 1945 and 1946, following a surge in federal spending as a result of World War II.

The forecasts don’t take into account the $1.9 trillion in federal spending proposed by President Biden and backed by Democrats, who narrowly control the House and Senate. (…)

Budget deficits will widen to 13.3% of GDP in 2051, from 5.7% in 2031, driven largely by increasing costs of servicing the debt, the CBO said. Net spending on interest will triple relative to GDP in the two decades leading up to 2051, and spending on programs such as Social Security and Medicare will also rise. (…)

The projections offered Thursday are an extension of forecasts CBO released last month for the next decade, which showed federal debt is expected to rise to a record 107% of economic output by 2031, from 100% of GDP in the last fiscal year ended Sept. 30. (…)

Net interest costs as a share of GDP will average 1.6% over the next decade, the CBO said, well below the 50-year average. But then they are projected to rise over the following two decades, reaching 8.6% by 2051. (…)

The CBO projected that yields on 10-year Treasurys will average 1.6% from 2021 to 2025 and 3% from 2026 to 2031, before rising steadily to 4.9% by 2051.

China Sets 2021 GDP Growth Target at Over 6% The goal is comfortably lower than most economists’ consensus expectations for the world’s second-largest economy to  grow by 8% or more this year.

(…) Mr. Li said in the annual report on Friday that the government would seek to cut the fiscal-deficit target to 3.2% of China’s projected GDP this year, compared with a target of more than 3.6% in 2020.

Beijing also plans to reduce the amount of debt that local governments are permitted to raise, allowing localities to issue 3.65 trillion yuan, the equivalent of $580 billion, in local government special-purpose bonds in 2021, from the 3.75 trillion yuan earmarked last year. The bond proceeds primarily fund infrastructure projects.

Mr. Li said China aims to keep consumer price inflation at around 3% in 2021, compared with last year’s 3.5% target and its actual increase of 2.5%.

The government also said it plans to create 11 million new jobs this year, up from the 2020 target of 9 million. It also aimed to cap the urban surveyed jobless rate at 5.5% in 2021, compared with a ceiling of 6% in 2020.

Beijing said the defense budget would increase by 6.8% in 2021, compared with a 6.6% increase last year. (…)

In their five-year plan, Chinese leaders broke with convention in not giving an average numerical growth target, saying only that they would plan to keep the economy running “within a reasonable range.” In the 2016-20 plan, the target was “more than 6.5%.” (…)

In lieu of a five-year GDP target, Beijing’s leaders said that they would aim to cap the surveyed urban unemployment rate at 5.5%, with labor productivity growth outpacing overall GDP growth. It also planned to increase the country’s urbanization rate to 65%, from 60.6% in 2019.

Reflecting Beijing’s emphasis on encouraging consumer spending—given concerns that rising geopolitical tensions could hurt export demand—officials said they want Chinese residents’ disposable income to keep pace with the country’s overall economic growth over the five years.

And underscoring the increasing importance China’s leaders ascribe to science and technology, total research and development expenditures will grow by more than 7% annually for the five years, they said.

China’s leaders also talked up the importance of supply chains and cutting-edge technologies, including pushing forward in artificial intelligence, semiconductors, blockchain and next-generation 6G wireless networks.

The plan also pledged to keep the proportion of manufacturing “basically stable” during the 2021-25 period. (…)

Facing social and fiscal pressures stemming from a rapidly aging population, the government also plans to raise the statutory retirement age in “a phased manner,” reviving a long-mooted but unpopular proposal.

The proposal was mentioned in the five-year plan, without detail. Men currently can retire at 60, and female factory workers as early as 50. Female public-sector and white-collar workers can retire at 55. (…)

China’s 2021 fiscal budget projected growth in annual revenue and expenditures of 8.1% and 1.8%, respectively.

China’s Pursuit of Natural Gas Jolts Markets and Drains Neighbors Beijing’s quest to run the world’s second-largest economy on cleaner energy is reshaping global trade in the fossil fuel.

(…) A sudden confluence of global supply outages and an unusually cold winter tripled LNG prices in mid-January to a record $32.50 a million British thermal units from early December—and brought into focus China’s increasingly outsize role.

Underpinned by its economic boom and rising presence in LNG spot markets, Beijing’s efforts to shift from coal to gas as a fuel over the longer term has drawn ever-larger LNG imports in recent years, tightening supplies available to gas-dependent neighbors Japan and South Korea. The three economies account for 60% of the world’s LNG consumption. (…)

In December, China imported 7.6 million metric tons, the most ever. Utilities in Japan reported severe shortages of natural gas and averted blackouts by turning back to coal, oil and other older means of power generation. LNG consumption rose last year by some 11%, far outpacing the 1% rise globally, data from consulting firm Wood Mackenzie shows. Imports meet about 45% of China’s demand, which has been rising since President Xi Jinping set around 2015 decadeslong plans to pipe natural gas into millions of Chinese homes and factories. Beijing views natural gas as a steppingstone—a cleaner fossil fuel—in its campaign for carbon neutrality by 2060.

Provincial authorities, including in southern Guangdong, began requiring more manufacturers to burn gas instead of coal last year, official reports say. And Beijing loosened rules in the past two years to allow more companies to import LNG, turning provincial gas distributors into more active bidders in spot markets once reserved for a handful of state-controlled giants. (…)

“We are doing everything possible to increase supply of the resource,” the National Development and Reform Commission said at the time. “We are making every effort to increase the purchase of spot LNG.”

In Japan, power plants in the heavily populated Kansai region were running at 99% of generation capacity; more than the usual 60% for LNG-fueled plants. Japan depends on natural gas for about a third of its electricity. (…)

China’s gas demand is set to keep rising, underpinning the potential for supply shocks to turn prices volatile in coming years.

“Even before winter, there were a lot of policies to hasten infrastructure investment” in China’s LNG storage and connectivity, said Woodmac analyst Miaoru Huang. “But I think after this price spike, there will be renewed incentive to advance the build.”

OPEC, Allies Keep a Lid on Oil Output Saudi Arabia and Russia have careened between optimism and dire warnings amid pandemic’s ebb and flow

(…) In an illustration of the fast-changing assessment within the group, Riyadh and Moscow had earlier Thursday debated a separate scenario bringing back one million barrels of oil a day, according to officials familiar with the discussions. Saudi Arabia would have contributed half of that fresh production, while OPEC-plus countries would pump the remainder under the proposal. In the end, though, Prince Abdulaziz convinced his counterparts to mostly hold pat, in part by granting Moscow a small exemption from the curbs, delegates said. (…)

Christyan Malek, head of oil-and-gas research at JP Morgan Chase & Co., said the Saudi decision indicates Riyadh’s confidence that U.S. shale companies for now can’t take advantage of the price rally, especially after being hit by a winter storm that knocked out some 2.5 million barrels a day of production in Texas and one million barrels a day in other oil-rich states. Mr. Malek said OPEC-plus restraint is bringing “prices to a point where the Saudis are back in control.” (…)

TIMBER WATCH
  • NDX’s head and shoulder, 100dma pierced, the 200dma is 9% below:

ndx

spy

  • The IPOX SPAC Index, which tracks the performance of a broad group, has fallen toward a bear market, down about 20% from its peak. Even the hot trend—in which famous executives, celebrities and athletes have rushed to raise money for yet-to-be identified future investments—isn’t immune to the souring sentiment on growth stocks. That, and maybe five new SPACs per day was just too many… (Bloomberg)

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  • SPAC offerings have constituted over 50% of total IPO volumes in the post-COVID era

About $438 million worth of shares in the VanEck Vectors Social Sentiment ETF (ticker BUZZ) changed hands on Thursday, making it the third best ETF debut on record, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. (…)

Index tracked by BUZZ outperforms S&P 500

The fund, which has been promoted by Barstool Sports Inc. founder Dave Portnoy, follows an index that uses AI to scan online sources like blogs and social media to identify the 75 most favorably mentioned equities.

Because of its criteria for inclusion, the hottest names among the day-trading crowd like GameStop Corp. and AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. don’t actually make it into the gauge. Its top holdings currently are Ford Motor Co., Twitter Inc. and DraftKings Inc. (…)

The fund opened at $24.40, closed yesterday at $23.52 (-3.6%).

Will be interesting to watch how artificial intelligence deals with this mob’s intelligence.

Speaking of cowboys:

Confused smile Marlboro Maker Asks FDA to Convince Americans Nicotine Isn’t That Bad

THE DAILY EDGE: 11 FEBRUARY 2021

INFLATION WATCH
U.S. Consumer Price Inflation Picks Up in January; Core Prices Stabilize

The Consumer Price Index rose 0.3% (1.4% y/y) during January following a 0.2% December increase, revised from 0.4%. The gain matched expectations in the Action Economics Forecast Survey. The CPI excluding food & energy held steady last month (1.4% y/y) as it did in December, revised down from 0.1%. A 0.2% January gain had been expected.

A 3.5% increase (-3.6% y/y) in energy product prices provided the lift to last month’s CPI gain, following December’s 2.6% rise, revised from 4.0%. Gasoline prices surged 7.4% (-8.6% y/y) after strengthening 5.2%. Fuel oil prices strengthened 5.4% (-16.5% y/y) following a 10.2% jump. The cost of electricity eased 0.2% (+1.5% y/y) while natural gas prices fell 0.4% (+4.3% y/y) for the second consecutive month.

Food prices edged 0.1% higher (3.8% y/y) last month, after rising 0.3% in December, revised from 0.4%. Food-at-home prices slipped 0.1% (+3.7% y/y). (…)

Goods prices excluding food & energy edged up 0.1% in January (1.7% y/y) for a second consecutive month. Apparel prices surged 2.2% (-2.5% y/y) after gaining 0.9% in December, revised from 1.4%. Sporting goods prices rose 0.7% (2.8% y/y), about the same as during each of the prior three months. Recreation product prices improved 0.1% (-0.2% y/y). Declining were prices for education & communication goods which fell 0.6% (-1.9% y/y) following two moderate increases.

New vehicle prices declined 0.5% (1.4% y/y). Used car & truck prices fell 0.9% (+10.0% y/y), the third consecutive monthly decline. Medical care product costs slipped 0.1% (-2.3% y/y), the fifth decline in the last six months. Household furnishings prices weakened 0.5% last month (+2.4% y/y) after holding steady in December. Household appliance prices weakened 1.1% (+5.7% y/y) after holding steady in December.

Services prices held steady for a second straight month (1.3% y/y). December was revised from a 0.1% rise. Shelter costs rose 0.1% for the sixth straight month and by a greatly lessened 1.6% y/y. The owners’ equivalent rent of primary residences also rose 0.1% and gained 2.0% y/y. Education & communication services prices held steady (2.0% y/y). Falling by 1.0% (+0.3% y/y) were recreation services prices which followed a 0.5% drop. The cost of public transportation fell 1.7% (-13.9% y/y). Medical care services prices improved 0.5% (2.9% y/y) following three straight months of decline.

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The Atlanta Fed’s sticky-price consumer price index (CPI)—a weighted basket of items that change price relatively slowly—increased 1.1 percent (on an annualized basis) in January, following a 1.0 percent increase in December. On a year-over-year basis, the series is up 1.7 percent.

On a core basis (excluding food and energy), the sticky-price index increased 0.9 percent (annualized) in January, and its 12-month percent change was 1.5 percent.

The flexible cut of the CPI—a weighted basket of items that change price relatively frequently—increased 11.4 percent (annualized) in January, and is up 1.8 percent on a year-over-year basis.

atlanta-fed_sticky-price-cpi (1)

  • Underlying Inflation Gauge (UIG)
  • The UIG “full data set” measure for January is currently estimated at 1.5%, unchanged from the previous month.
  • The “prices-only” measure for January is currently estimated at 2.1%, unchanged from the previous month.
  • The twelve-month change in the January CPI was +1.4%, unchanged from the previous month.

For January 2021, trend CPI inflation is estimated to be in the 1.5% to 2.1% range, which is unchanged from the December 2020 range.

At the risk of completely boring you, here’s the Cleveland Fed’s Median Price CPI table:

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Unsurpisingly

Yields, which fall when bond prices rise, dropped after the Labor Department said core consumer prices, excluding the often volatile food and energy categories, remained unchanged in January compared with the previous month. Core prices were also flat in December after a downward revision to the earlier estimate. (…)

The post-report rally was notable because it came hours before a $41 billion Treasury auction of 10-year notes. The looming influx of new bonds into the market would typically put upward pressure on yields, which were climbing before the inflation report. The auction later met solid demand from investors, leaving yields still lower on the session. (…)

(…) The Fed is unlikely to “even think about withdrawing policy support” by raising rates or reducing its bond purchases for the foreseeable future, Mr. Powell said at a virtual appearance before the Economic Club of New York.

The Fed chief also repeated his call for more fiscal assistance for the economy, saying that monetary policy alone won’t be enough to restore the labor market to full strength. “It will require a society-wide commitment, with contributions from across government and the private sector,” Mr. Powell said. (…)

But it is fiscal policy that “is the essential tool for this situation,” Mr. Powell said Wednesday. (…)

Mr. Powell—also a Republican—said Wednesday that now isn’t the time to address the path of the federal debt and that he worries less about inflation than about the economic pain inflicted by the pandemic. (…)

“Inflation dynamics will evolve, but it’s hard to make the case why they would evolve very suddenly.”

Mr. Powell also said that providing too much support to an economy buffeted by risks and uncertainties is preferable to doing too little. (…)

The unemployment rate understates the impact of the pandemic on workers, particularly the most vulnerable, Mr. Powell said. Counting people who have left the labor force and those whose employment status is misclassified would increase the jobless rate to near 10% in January, he said.

“Published unemployment rates during Covid have dramatically understated the deterioration in the labor market,” Mr. Powell said. (…)

While the number of workers earning at least $85,000 a year rose 1% between February and December, the number of workers earning less than $30,000 was down 14%, economists at the New York Fed said in a report published Tuesday.

LSE_2021_heterogeneityVI-some-workers-hit-harder_abel_ch1_v2-01LSE_2021_heterogeneityVI-some-workers-hit-harder_abel_ch3-01-01

Another way to look at the same data:

Recession has Nearly Ended for High-Wage Workers,

but Job Losses Persist for Low-Wage Workers

The Atlanta Fed Wage Growth Tracker reveals that workers in the bottom wage quartile are seeing accelerating wage growth. If and when lower wage employment resumes, the aggregate wage bill will swell.

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(…) Ms. Daly [a voting member of the FOMC] said the things now debated by Congress “are not things that are going to overheat our economy. These are things going to distressed people, distressed sectors, distressed businesses.”

The pandemic “is not over. And for us to say [more aid] is too much, I don’t know what metric and yardstick people are using; it’s certainly not looking out in their communities” and taking stock of the pain many Americans are feeling, Ms. Daly said. (…)

Like many of her colleagues, Ms. Daly said she wouldn’t be surprised to see inflation pressures accelerate as the economy recovers, but she doesn’t expect that to endure. And that will pose a test for policy makers.

“The head fake I want to avoid is thinking that a few quarters of very rapid growth can be extrapolated to future quarters of very rapid growth. If that happens, fantastic,” Ms. Daly said.

“The greatest risk is that we get nervous, and we pull back accommodation too quickly on the fears of rapidly rising inflation or on the overconfidence that inflation’s hit our target, and then we have more work to do to get it back up,” Ms. Daly said.

(…) markets show no sign of concern, either in the average expectation of inflation implied by the bond market or the likelihood of very high inflation in the options market, both of which are merely back to where they stood in 2018. (…)

The Summers/Blanchard case is based on the theory that a hot economy feeds through into price rises. There is a link between the two, as prices tend to rise faster as the output gap—however measured—narrows. But the link is very far from perfect, and depends on another unknown: how far unemployment can fall before wage pressures build. Policy makers across the developed world repeatedly reduced their guesses for the sustainable level of unemployment over the past decade, and there’s no particular reason to think that the pre-pandemic figure—3.5%—is the minimum, or even that it is the right way to measure joblessness.

According to the CBO, the economy had been running hot for two years before the pandemic, yet the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge was still below its 2% target. (…)

In a more diverse job market, inflation expectations play a bigger role, both for workers asking for a raise and CEOs deciding on prices. With inflation having been so low for so long, the evidence from Japan is that it is hard to shift expectations up again, and a one-off jump might not do it. (…)

fredgraph - 2021-02-11T062900.331

Bloomberg’s Ben Holland summarizes the big debate:

With No Inflation in Sight, Why the Inflation Debate?

Case for Inflation: Money Supply

    • Case Against: Money Velocity

      Case for Inflation: Households are Flush

        • Case Against: Households are Cautious

          Case for Inflation: Loose Central Banks

            • Case Against: Loose Labor Markets

              Case for Inflation: Supply Shocks

                • Case Against: Spare Capacity

                For one, ING is clear:

                US inflation: The only way is up!

                (…) With Covid containment measures having eased somewhat and demand returning, prices have recovered over the subsequent eight months. If price levels stay unchanged for the next four months the comparison with the depressed price levels of that heavily stressed March-May period means headline inflation is going to rise to 2.8% YoY. This is the bear minimum annual inflation will get to.

                Given rising commodity and energy prices and rising freight costs that are still to work through to consumer prices this takes us closer to 3%. Then with the vaccine roll out process gaining traction, potentially paving the way for a fuller economic re-opening at some point in 2Q21, many businesses may take the opportunity to raise their prices.

                This is most likely to happen in sectors that have experienced supply constraints such as the leisure and hospitality industry. Faced with less competition (bars and restaurants having gone out of business, hotels having closed and aircraft mothballed) at a time when customers are desperate to experience things they haven’t been able to do for 12 months, pricing power is going to be strong.

                Throw in rising housing rents – which on their own account for 7.9% of the inflation basket – and we could see inflation push above 3.5% and possibly head close to 4% by May.

                unnamed (24)

                Source: Macrobond, ING

                December’s $900bn fiscal support package followed by the proposed $1.9tn package, followed by a potential $3tn Build Back Better infrastructure and Green energy plan is a lot of money going into an economy at a time when the Federal Reserve continues to buy $120bn of financial assets each month. (…)

                Remember, household cash and savings deposits have risen $2.4tn since 3Q 2019 and credit card balances are at 4 year lows so it isn’t just government that has cash ammunition to spend.

                How sustained inflation will be is likely going to be determined by the response of the labour market. The US is largely a service sector economy meaning that the main inflation driver over the medium to longer term is the price of the workforce. If the economy sees rapid jobs growth and wages start to rise, this is when inflation can become a much bigger, ingrained issue.

                We suspect the robust growth environment and a higher and more sustained set of inflation readings will lead to a change of thinking with Quantitative Easing likely to be tapered before year-end and the first Fed rate hike coming in 2023. Given this backdrop we expect the 10Y Treasury yield to push up to 1.5% by mid-year with a 1.75% handle our base case for 2H21.

                Let me throw in this interesting chart from tracktherecovery.com showing that the high income segment is not currently spending much, unable to buy a lot of the services it normally craves on. But this is the segment with most of the excess savings. Meanwhile, low income people are splurging.

                Consumers are spending the latest stimulus cheque – daily credit & debit card transactions

                chart (12)

                Money velocity may be rising, judging by money moving from savings to checking accounts:

                fredgraph - 2021-02-11T082441.724

                Certainly related:

                More U.S. Buyers Than Ever Seeking $1 Million-Plus Homes More than 1 in 10 home searches on Redfin were for set for seven-digit properties

                (…) Last January, about 8.5% of all saved searches were for homes at or above that price threshold.

                (…) fierce competition over a shortage of homes for sale has caused prices to soar across the U.S., and has pushed the median home price past $500,000 for the first time in numerous cities. In December, the U.S. median sale price was up 13% from a year prior, by Redfin’s measure.

                In January, 36% of home searches were filtered for properties asking $500,000 or less, down from 39% a year ago. It’s a sign that lower-income buyers are not as active in the market. (…)

                “In the past, anything over $1.5 million would stay on the market for several weeks, but that’s not the case anymore,” said Seattle-based Redfin agent Bliss Ong. “Even in the $2 million range, homes are selling within the first week.”

                Meanwhile:

                Oil Demand Recovery Expected to Outstrip Production The global supply and demand of crude oil are on course to continue rebalancing this year after the turmoil brought by the pandemic in 2020, the International Energy Agency said.

                (…) The agency significantly increased its forecast for producing nations outside of the pact between the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies such as Russia, raising its projections for non-OPEC supply growth by 290,000 barrels a day to an increase of 830,000 barrels a day this year.

                At the same time, the IEA trimmed its forecast for global oil demand by 200,000 barrels a day to 96.4 million barrels—around 3% less than in 2019—but said part of that was because of a change to historic data. (…)

                At the beginning of February, Saudi Arabia—one of the world’s largest producers—unilaterally cut an additional one million barrels of crude a day, a move that surprised the world when it was announced a month earlier.

                Along with resilient demand in developing-world powerhouses, such as China and India, as well as hopes of a large U.S. stimulus bill and volatile trading in broader financial markets, Riyadh’s move has fueled a recovery in oil prices.

                The so-far successful efforts of OPEC-plus to hold back supply, the rollout of coronavirus vaccination programs, and the prospect of weaker travel restrictions remain the basis for cautious forecasts of an oil-market recovery, the IEA said. (…)

                If balances continue to tighten and non-OPEC producers increase production, that could fray the cohesion of OPEC-plus cuts, the IEA said. That might have consequences for the oil-price rally.

                TECHNICALS WATCH
                Speculative volume skyrockets as smart money sells

                Last month, there was a remarkable jump in the most speculative corners of the market, including leveraged vehicles like options and margin trading, and lottery ticket shares in the form of penny stocks.

                The roaming horde of speculators found that niche in December, with more than 1 trillion shares traded. It picked up even more in January. (…)

                At the same time, the smart money is selling. At least, if we can consider activity during the last hour of trading to be the work of more informed investors, the theory behind the Smart Money Index. As calculated by Bloomberg, this measure is hanging near its lows despite indexes being at new highs.

                (…) never before have we seen so many days when the S&P 500 was in the upper 90% of its 1-year range while the Smart Money Index is in the bottom 10% of its own 1-year range. (…)

                There has been no shortage of signs of extreme, even record, speculation in recent weeks. The biggest counter-point to that has been widespread and impressive buying interest. That started to show some cracks in the past few weeks, but recent days have started to make up for it. It’s a challenging dichotomy but risks in the short- to medium-term appear high, and the persistent last-hour selling adds to those concerns.

                Speculative demand is increasingly being met by speculative supply:

                unnamed - 2021-02-11T073313.024These lesser-scrutinized blank-check IPOs, often backed (or just pumped) by a celebrity, are hitting the market at a furious pace. According to Dealogic, SPAC IPOs have raised $38.3 billion so far this year. We are well on our way to surpassing $300 billion in new SPAC listings this year—a four-fold increase on 2020, the so-called “year of the SPAC.” (Bloomberg)

                image

                The shorts (dumb or smart?) are essentially gone, like in 2000:

                unnamed - 2021-02-11T073245.574

                That said, the dependable 13/34–Week EMA Trend, while extended, is not flashing anything close to red:

                And NDR’s demand/supply volume chart shows rising demand and declining supply…

                JPMorgan Says Commodities May Have Just Begun a New Supercycle

                (…) Everyone from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to Bank of America Corp. to Ospraie Management LLC are calling for a commodities bull market as government stimulus kicks in and vaccines are deployed around the world to fight the coronavirus. (…)

                “We believe that the new commodity upswing, and in particular oil up cycle, has started,” the JPMorgan analysts said in their note. “The tide on yields and inflation is turning.” (…)

                Hedge funds similarly haven’t been this bullish on commodities since the mid-2000s, when China was stockpiling everything from copper to cotton while crop failures and export bans around the world boosted food prices, eventually toppling governments during the Arab Spring. The backdrop is now starting to look similar, with a broad gauge of commodity prices hitting its highest in six years. (…)

                Previous commodity supercycles peaked in the late 1970's and 2008

                Warnings:

                Biden, China’s Xi Hold Talks Over Rights, Trade, Climate The U.S. president raised issues that divide the two countries but also held open the possibility of working together on common concerns.

                (…) The call, Wednesday night in Washington, came after Mr. Biden in recent days spoke with a host of allies in Europe and Asia, signaling that he seeks to deal with China as the leader of the world’s democracies rather than solely an American president. The U.S. needs to “join together with others to hold China accountable for its abuses and to shape China’s choices going forward,” said a senior administration official.

                A White House statement said Mr. Biden raised his “fundamental concerns about Beijing’s coercive and unfair economic practices,” as well as human rights issues and “preserving a free and open Indo-Pacific” region. But it said the leaders discussed cooperation on fighting Covid-19, climate change and other issues. (…)

                The Chinese leader reiterated Beijing’s view that “cooperation is the only correct choice for both sides,” according to a readout from Chinese state media. He said that the U.S. and China should work together on issues such as efforts to combat the Covid-19 pandemic, spur a global economic recovery and maintain regional stability.

                “China and the U.S. will have different views on certain issues and the key is to respect each other, treat each other equally, and to manage and deal with the issues in a constructive manner,” Mr. Xi was quoted as saying. (…)

                Heavy tariffs will remain in place for now while the Biden team conducts a review of trade policy internally and with allies, the senior administration official said. At that point, the administration would decide which ones to roll back.

                Currently the U.S. has levies on $370 billon of Chinese imports—three quarters of everything China sells to the U.S. (…)

                The official also said the U.S. plans to work with allies on a joint plan to deny critical technologies to Beijing. Biden officials have argued that the technology competition between the two nations is one of the administration’s main focuses. (…)

                ZeroHedge has its own color:

                (…) According to an account of the conversation reported by Chinese state television, Xi said that “cooperation was the only choice and that the two countries need to properly manage disputes in a constructive manner.” Xi also told Biden that “confrontation between China and the United States would be a disaster and the two sides should re-establish the means to avoid misjudgments.”

                Xi also said Beijing and Washington should re-establish various mechanisms for dialogue in order to understand each others’ intentions and avoid misunderstandings, the report said.

                Finally, and most bizarrely, Xi told Biden that he hopes the United States will cautiously handle matters related to Taiwan, Hong Kong and Xinjiang that deal with matters of China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. Quite the opposite of what Biden reportedly told Xi… (…)

                On Sunday, Biden told CBS News that China would face “extreme competition” from the US. While he praised his Chinese counterpart — whom he knows from his time as Barack Obama’s vice-president — as “very bright”, he said he “doesn’t have a democratic . . . bone in his body”.

                Just a few days prior, Blinken told Yang the US would stand up for democracy and human rights, signalling a hawkish stance towards China. “I made clear the US will . . . hold Beijing accountable for its abuses of the international system,” Blinken wrote on Twitter following the call. In response, Yang warned the US not to interfere in Hong Kong and Xinjiang, saying “no one can stop the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation”. (…)

                Iran Makes Uranium Metal in Breach of Nuclear Deal Iran has started producing uranium metal, a material that can be used to form the core of nuclear weapons, the United Nations atomic agency told members in a confidential report.