Producer Price Index (PPI)

The Producer Price Index (PPI) came in higher than expected:

  • Expectations: 7.2%
  • Actual: 7.4%

Producer Price Index (PPI) came in above estimates on both headline (7.4% vs 7.2% estimate) and core (6.2% vs 5.9% estimate), comments Liz Young, Chief Investment Officer, SoFi. The Producer Price Index measures inflation at the wholesale level, which acts as kind of a leading indicator.

Inflation remains high, but is trending down, because the main driver of inflation is not interest rates. Instead, the main driver of inflation is excessive fiscal deficit spending and loose monetary policy.

Although, PPI is still falling moderately on a year-over-year basis, but any future upside surprises don’t bode well for upcoming Consumer Price Index (CPI) numbers which will be released next week.

The Producer Price Index (PPI) measures the change in the price of goods sold by manufacturers. It is a leading indicator of consumer price inflation, which accounts for the majority of overall inflation.

Federal Reserve Policy and the Stock Market

“Don’t Fight the Fed” is an old market cliché that was very applicable during the longest bull market in US history. It is also very applicable currently as the Fed implemented policies to slow the economy by raising interest rates and selling assets from its balance sheet. ~ Chris Vermeulen, Seeking Alpha

In 1977, the US Congress officially gave the Federal Reserve a multi-part mandate to maximize employment, maintain prices near an acceptable inflation target of around 2%, and moderate long-term interest rates. In general terms, Fed policies are supposed to stimulate the economy when it’s weak and cool it when it’s too hot.

The adage highlights the strong correlation between Federal Reserve policy and the direction of the stock market.

“Don’t Fight the Fed” embodied the sentiment that if the Fed was stimulating the economy with accommodative policies, it made little sense to bet against the market’s bullish trend. Effectively, when the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy is loose, markets tend to move higher, volatility is subdued, and investors’ risk is limited, so it makes sense to stay invested and ride the wave. Why “fight the Fed” by selling stocks when it’s on your side?

The Fed held interest rates near zero and instituted a policy called quantitative easing—where it bought mortgage-backed securities and U.S. Treasuries to increase the money supply in hopes of spurring lending and capital investment.

When the Federal Reserve is on a mission to slow the economy down in order to tap down inflation, technology and growth stocks are generally hurt as the cost of capital and borrowing money increases. Thus, the old adage, “Don’t fight the Fed” becomes an important one for investors to abide.

With inflation being persistent in the U.S., Fed officials have taken a new monetary stance that is far less appealing for investors.

The Fed is in Quantitative Tightening mode and has raised interest rates and sold assets from its balance sheet. This calendar year, the Fed has raised interest rates four times and has begun shrinking its balance sheet after years of quantitative easing pushed its holdings to nearly $9 trillion. Its intent is to cool the economy and reduce inflation.

The adage, “Don’t fight the Fed”, is a warning to avoid stocks, or at least to take a more conservative approach to investing.

As a result, investors should take a more cautious approach in this tightening environment and prioritize defensive stocks with pristine balance sheets and steady revenue growth that can survive inflationary pressure.

Inflationary economies tend to punish unprofitable technology and growth companies, despite their potential. Without profits or cash flow, it’s simply too hard to improve quarter over quarter at a time when money becomes more expensive to borrow.


References:

  1. https://www.fortunebuilders.com/best-stocks-to-buy/
  2. https://fortune.com/2022/09/14/dont-fight-the-fed-new-meaning-inflation-economy-dan-niles-satori-fund/amp/
  3. https://seekingalpha.com/article/4544537-dont-fight-the-fed

The Impact of Increasing Interest Rates on the Economy and Investing

The Federal Reserve Bank (Fed) implements monetary policy that has a broad impact on the US economy. One of the ways the Fed impacts its dual mandate of managing unemployment and inflation is to periodically raise or lower interest rates.

The Federal Reserve in November 2022 raised interest rates by three-quarters of a percentage point — or 75 basis points — for the fourth time in the calendar year, bringing its key benchmark borrowing rate that rules all other interest rates in the economy up to a target range of 3.75-5 percent, where it hasn’t been since early 2008, according to a Bankrate.

The fed funds rate matters because it has ripple effects on every aspect of consumers’ financial lives, from how much they’re charged to borrow to how much they earn in interest when they save. And, changing interest rates is one of the main tools that the Fed can use to cool down inflation.  

Inflation is the increase in the prices of goods and services over time and occurs when the demand for those goods and services exceeds supply. Inflation also represents a loss of purchasing power.

Typically, the Fed raises interest rates in times of economic expansion and does so to prevent the economy from overheating. The opposite is true when interest rates are cut, which typically occurs when the economy is in a down trend. 

To raise interest rates, the Fed changes the overnight rates at which it lends money to banks. That sets off a chain reaction that impacts the rates banks charge to businesses and individuals. When rates rise, the impact on the economy includes:

  • Borrowing costs rise for businesses, which can reduce investments in new plants, equipment, marketing, and physical expansion.
  • Borrowing costs rise for consumers, which reduces consumer spending, home buying, and investing.
  • Savings accounts and other low-risk investments earn more interest, making investing in low-risk instruments more attractive.

Markets adjust, with fixed income securities generally reducing in value and equities reacting in a mixed fashion depending on how much a rate rise is expected to affect specific types of businesses.

The U.S. Interest Rate Historical Timeline

The chart below shows the history of Fed Funds Rates going back to 1954.

The U.S. Interest Rate Historical Timeline The chart below shows the history of Fed Funds Rates going back to 1954.

Chart of Fed Funds Rate (Macrotrends)

Rising interest rates impact investing in several ways, some of which are fundamental and some of which are perceptual.

Adding to the dilemma for many investors is the inflation outlook and the question of how transitory or persistent that inflation will be. From a rate perspective alone, rising rates can be expected to have the following impact:

  • Prices of bonds and other fixed-income investments will weaken with rising rates, especially the longer-term instruments.
  • Rates offered on new bonds will rise, making them somewhat more competitive with equities.
  • Rates should rise in bank products such as CDs, bringing them back on the radar for investors.
  • When rates rise, stocks tend to fall — when rates fall, stocks rise.

Equity market reactions will be mixed, depending on the effects of higher rates on different companies and industries. Companies that are more leveraged will incur higher costs. Companies with high-ticket products that rely on consumer credit may weaken. On the whole, rising rates should also dampen enthusiasm to speculate, given higher borrowing costs.

“When interest rates are low, companies can assume debt at a low cost, which they may use to add team members or expand into new ventures,” says Brenton Harrison, CFP® professional based in Nashville, TN. “When rates rise, it’s harder for companies to borrow and more costly to manage what debt they already have, which impacts their ability to grow,” he adds. These higher costs may result in lower revenues, thus negatively impacting the value of the company.

Also keep in mind that as rates fall on savings accounts and certificates of deposit, investors generally seek out higher paying investments like stocks and are generally seen as a catalyst for growth in the market; in a rising rate environment investors tend to shift away from stock to places with less risk and safer returns. 

The specter of rising rates can also change the behavior of investors, many of whom may decide to put off purchases on credit or sell stocks that were purchased on margin, based more on their expectations than on near-term reality.

“Central banks tend to focus on fighting the last war,” says Scott Sumner, monetary policy chair at George Mason University’s Mercatus Center. “If you have a lot of inflation, you get a more hawkish stance. If you’ve undershot your inflation target, then the Fed thinks, ‘Well, maybe we should’ve been more expansionary.’”


References:

  1. https://seekingalpha.com/article/4503025-federal-reserve-interest-rate-history
  2. https://www.bankrate.com/banking/federal-reserve/history-of-federal-funds-rate/
  3. https://www.businessinsider.com/personal-finance/how-do-interest-rates-affect-the-stock-market

Inflation: Core Consumer Price Index

Inflation is measure of the increase in the cost of living which can erode the value of your money, and more importantly – the goods, services, rent and mortgages that you can purchase with that money.

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics showed that falling gasoline prices helped lead to a second consecutive lower annual U.S. inflation reading, but the consumer price index still edged up by 0.1% in August, contrary to the 0.1% drop expected by economists polled by The Wall Street Journal, writes MarketWatch. The core Consumer Price Index (CPI), which strips out food and energy prices rose by a much sharper 0.6%.

The year-over-year food index component of the CPI was up 11.4% in August. Higher food prices “reflect very tight global supply/demand dynamics,” says Jake Hanley, managing director and senior portfolio strategist at Teucrium. Rising costs don’t impact all households the same way. Some families may have a personal inflation rate that’s lower (or higher) than the national average, depending on what they buy.

Rising costs don’t impact all households the same way. Some families may have a personal inflation rate that’s lower (or higher) than the national average, depending on what they buy.

“Fuel prices have continued to be a major component in inflation figures, but while gasoline prices have cooled considerably over the last 3 months, diesel prices have remained fairly elevated,” says Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy. Diesel prices are a “major component of inflation in other areas of the economy, such as the cost of groceries.”

“Fuel prices have continued to be a major component in inflation figures, but while gasoline prices have cooled considerably over the last 3 months, diesel prices have remained fairly elevated,” says Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy. Diesel prices are a “major component of inflation in other areas of the economy, such as the cost of groceries.”

“Fuel prices have continued to be a major component in inflation figures, but while gasoline prices have cooled considerably over the last 3 months, diesel prices have remained fairly elevated.” — Patrick De Haan, GasBuddy

Diesel and natural-gas prices have remained high, despite a retreat in recent weeks, and fuel costs are a key component when it comes to growing the food the nation needs. Diesel engines power about 75% of U.S. farm equipment and transport 90% of farm products, according to data from the Diesel Technology Forum. 

Diesel “will likely remain at historical premiums to gasoline—and could see more disconnect if this winter is cold due to diesel and heating oil being essentially the same product, keeping demand elevated,” De Haan says.

Wall Street economists see the U.S. Federal Reserve lifting interest rates higher than they previously expected following the latest U.S. consumer price inflation data. Economists at TD Securities said they now expect the Fed to raise its benchmark rate by 75 basis points next week.


References:

  1. https://www.marketwatch.com/story/high-fuel-costs-will-continue-to-contribute-to-the-rise-in-food-costs-11663100705
  2. https://www.marketwatch.com/story/the-biggest-fed-rate-hike-in-40-years-it-might-be-coming-11663097227

US inflation cools in October.

Overall inflation as measured by CPI rose 7.7% year-over-year (YoY), below the 7.9% estimate.

The annual inflation rate fell to 7.7 percent in October from 8.2 percent in September, according to the consumer price index (CPI), a closely watched inflation gauge. Economists expected the annual inflation rate to fall to 7.9 percent, according to consensus projections.

Core CPI, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, increased 6.3% YoY, below the 6.5% YoY change economists expected to see.

The October CPI report is an encouraging sign for the U.S. economy as policymakers rush to bring down inflation without causing a recession. While decline in inflation will not be enough to keep the Federal Reserve from raising rates, it may allow the bank to do so at a slower pace.


References:

  1. https://thehill.com/policy/finance/3729055-inflation-fell-to-7-7-percent-annual-increase-in-october/

Monetary Tightening

“We have overstimulated the economy by a big factor” ~ Sam Zell

Billionaire investor Sam Zell told CNBC Squawk Box that he sees no reason to be optimistic that there won’t be further severe economic (recession) and market (bear market) pains. “We have overstimulated the economy by a big factor,” Zell remarked. “We have to take the punch bowl away.”

He thinks a liquidity crisis may be up next and believed the whole “inflation is transitory” political soundbite originating from the Federal Reserve and the Biden Administration several months ago was an embarrassment and the phrase should be relegated to the dust bin of history.

Free money–monetary quantitative easing and historically low interest rates–leads to excess which leads to recession, states Zell. It’s really that simple.

Markets will not bottom until all that excess loose money bleeds out of the economy and Fed tightens its monetary policy. The pain of recession and further market decline are needed and will be good for long term markets.

The Federal Reserve maintained a too loose and easy monetary policy for too long.

“If you get really good at what you do, you get the freedom to be who you really are.” ~ Sam Zell


References:

  1. https://www.costar.com/article/1152237605/real-estate-magnate-sam-zell-moonlights-as-economist
  2. https://www.agriculture.com/news/business/risk-and-reward-a-conversation-with-sam-zell

Sam Zell, founder and chairman of Agricultural Real Estate, used to joke that his father made a life-or-death decision when he was 34 years old, and then never made another mistake again. Zell was inspired by his father’s confidence.

Dividend Growth Stocks

Dividend-growth stocks typically exhibit stable earnings, solid fundamentals and strong histories of profit and growth.

Dividend Growth companies are companies that have consistently grown their dividends over the long-term, such as for at least 15 consecutive years. According to ProShares, these companies generally come with attributes of quality that investors have come to expect:

  • Durable competitive advantages, solid fundamentals, and management teams that are committed to returning capital to shareholders.
  • Higher gross and net profit margins than the broader index, with more consistent levels of earnings growth through the market’s ups and downs.
  • Lower levels of debt than companies in the broader market index.

Dividend growers have also demonstrated a history of weathering market turbulence over time. They’ve done so by delivering most of the market’s upside in rising markets with considerably less of the downside in falling ones—a valuable feature in times of uncertainty.

“Dividend growth stocks have outperformed in various market environments,” according to global investment management firm Nuveen. “Dividend growth stocks have provided an attractive combination of earnings and cash flow growth potential, healthy balance sheets and sustainable dividend policies. These stocks have historically offered compelling performance during up markets and provided a buffer during market drawdowns and in volatile environments.”

When the Federal Reserve shifts from an accommodative monetary easing policy to a restrictive monetary policy, there is often an initial period of market volatility and uncertainty.

Dividend growth has been a desirable trait for equities immediately before, during, and after past cycles of less accommodative Fed policy.

Many investing gurus recommend strong dividend payers as the way to weather dual challenges of inflation and recession, noting that the dividend stocks’ income streams are capable of offsetting inflation – even when inflation is running higher than 8%.

“Dividend growth is one of the few things that has kept up with inflation as you go back and look over the decades. So when you go back and you look at the ’70s, ’80s — which is the last time you can actually find any notable inflation — what you see is dividend growth pretty much kept pace with it,” explained Sharon Hill, the co-leader of Vanguard’s Equity Income Fund.

With the three challenges facing investors today—rising interest rates, slowing economic growth and income scarcity–dividend growth stocks could make a better choice for the current economic and market environment.

Source: ProShares, Bloomberg. Data from 12/31/05 to 12/31/21. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Index calculations do not reflect any management fees, transaction costs or expenses. Indexes are unmanaged, and one cannot invest in an index.

High-quality companies that have consistently grown their dividends tend to have stable earnings, solid fundamentals and strong histories of profit and growth. As a result, they have been generally better positioned to weather potentially slowing growth.


References:

  1. https://finance.yahoo.com/news/investing-whiz-sharon-hill-says-155244449.html
  2. https://www.fidelity.com/insights/investing-ideas/10-dividend-growth-stocks
  3. https://www.proshares.com/browse-all-insights/insights/three-reasons-dividend-growth-may-be-the-right-approach
  4. https://www.proshares.com/browse-all-insights/insights/why-dividend-growth-mid-caps-may-belong-in-your-portfolio

Strong Jobs and Weakening Global Oil Demand

Strong September U.S. job data showed that the U.S. economy is still running faster than the Federal Reserve would like, making it all but inevitable the central bank will continue to raise the federal fund interest rates through the end of the year in an attempt to curb inflation, according to Charles Schwab’s Schwab Market Perspective.

The Federal Reserve is trying to slow down economic growth to prevent inflation from becoming entrenched. WSJ

Higher interest rates imposed by the Federal Reserve don’t affect the U.S. economy only—the pain spreads around the globe as other countries’ currencies weaken against the U.S. dollar.

The Fed combats inflation by slowing the economy through tighter financial conditions — such as higher borrowing costs and lower stock prices — which curb spending, further reducing employment, income and spending.

The Fed has raised its benchmark lending rate by three percentage points so far this year, but you wouldn’t know that from the burgeoning jobs market.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell has acknowledged that the central bank’s fight against inflation will likely involve “pain for some households and businesses,” alluding to the risk of recession and rising unemployment. However, the Fed’s moves are also causing pain beyond U.S. borders.

The Fed is often referred to as the “central bank to the world” because its policies have a big influence on the global economy. Because the dollar is the world’s reserve currency, U.S. interest rate changes ripple across the globe in the form of currency volatility.

Meanwhile, this month’s announcement by OPEC+ members that they will curb oil production may not have as big an impact on oil prices and global inflation as some investors fear.

Source: Charles Schwab, Bloomberg data as of 10/8/2022.

Historically, OPEC hasn’t driven oil prices—it has followed them. OPEC output tends to lag changes in oil prices by about three months, meaning the cartel tends to cut oil production after prices fall when demand weakens, and increase it after prices are already rising when demand improves.

And demand for oil has been weakening. The International Energy Agency’s September Oil Market Report projected that oil markets would be oversupplied by 1 million barrels per day (mbpd) in the second half of calendar year 2022.

As a result, the OPEC cuts aren’t likely to be a meaningful driver of global inflation or the economy, but could instead serve as a lagging indicator of the slowing demand for oil as the global economy weakens, projects the Charles Schwab Schwab Market Perspective.


  1. https://www.schwab.com/learn/story/market-perspective
  2. Nick Timiraos, Flush Consumers Vex Fed Strategy, The Wall Street Journal, October 31, 2022, pp. A2.

World in Love with Debt

“There is $50 trillion more in world debt today than there was in 2018.” And that will hurt equities. Larry McDonald

2021 global debt database shows largest one year debt surge post World War II to $226 trillion, i.e., 256% of global GDP in 2020. Government borrowing was half this increase; global public debt rose by 20% to an unprecedented level in over 50 years.

In a financial sense, the bond (or debt) market dwarfs the stock market. Although the rise in interest rates has been devastating for bond investors because of the inverse relationship between rates (yields) and bond prices. In actuality, both the debt and equity markets have fallen this year.

Yet, “The world is still in love with debt,” according to analysts at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Debt vulnerabilities are rising, with potential costs and risks to debtors, creditors and, more broadly, global stability and prosperity. But, does it matter. After all, world governments owe the money to their own citizens. The rising total global debt is important for two reasons.

  • First, when debt rises faster than economic output (as it has been doing in recent years), higher government debt implies more state interference in the economy and higher taxes in the future.
  • Second, debt must be rolled over at regular intervals. This creates a recurring popularity test for individual governments’ sovereign bonds. Fail that test, as various euro-zone governments have done, and the country (and its neighbors) can be plunged into fiscal and economic crisis.

If the Federal Reserve raises the federal funds rate by another 100 basis points and continues its balance-sheet reductions at current levels, “they will crash the market,” states Larry McDonald, founder of The Bear Traps Report and author of “A Colossal Failure of Common Sense”.

A pivot may not prevent pain

McDonald expects the Federal Reserve to become concerned enough about the equity market’s reaction to its monetary tightening to “back away over the next three weeks,” announce a smaller federal funds rate increase of 0.50% in November “and then stop.”


References:

  1. https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/the-stock-market-is-in-trouble-thats-because-the-bond-market-is-very-close-to-a-crash/ar-AA12Q8kd
  2. https://www.businessinsider.com/baml-global-debt-has-rise-by-50-trillion-since-the-financial-crisis-2015-10
  3. https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/ar/2022/in-focus/debt-dynamics/

Consumer Price Index (CPI) at 8.2% Inflation Rate

U.S. inflation hits 8.2% in September — hotter than expected. Core CPI surges to 6.6%, the highest since 1982.

A key consumer inflation report, the Consumer Price Index (CPI), came in hotter than expected, signaling that the Federal Reserve will likely continue with aggressive interest rate hikes. Prices consumers pay for a wide variety of goods and services rose as inflation pressures continued to weigh on the U.S. economy.

The consumer price index for September increased 0.4% for the month, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. On a 12-month basis, so-called headline inflation was up 8.2%, off its peak around 9% in June but still hovering near the highest levels since the early 1980s. Core CPI, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, rose to 6.6% from 6.3%. Both numbers came in higher than economists polled by the Wall Street Journal had expected.

Source: Bloomberg

The report signals that inflation is a persistent problem even amid large interest rate hikes from the central bank. Going forward, the Fed will likely have to keep delivering increases and keep rates high until there are signs that inflation is cooling off.


References:

  1. https://www.cnbc.com/2022/10/12/stock-futures-are-up-as-investors-await-inflation-data.html
  2. https://www.marketwatch.com/story/u-s-stock-futures-plunge-as-september-cpi-comes-in-hotter-than-expected-01665664995