U.S. GDP Contracted for the First Time since 2020Q2

A recession is typically considered two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth.

U.S. economic activity contracted for the first time since mid-2020, with lingering supply chain constraints, inflation at its hottest rate since the early 1980s, expected interest rate increases announced by the Fed, and disruptions amid Russia’s war in Ukraine weighing on economic growth.

The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) released its initial estimate of first-quarter U.S. gross domestic product (GDP).

The main metrics from the report, compared to consensus data compiled by Bloomberg, are:

  • GDP annualized, quarter-over-quarter: -1.4% vs. 1.0% expected, 6.9% in Q4
  • Personal Consumption: 2.7% vs. 3.5% expected, 2.5% in Q4
  • Core Personal Consumption Expenditures, quarter-over-quarter: 5.2% vs. 5.5% expected, 5.0% in Q4

What does the metrics all mean?

The economic metrics are important indicators of the state of the U.S. economy at the start of this calendar year — especially now as the U.S. braces for interest rate hikes to cool inflation and for the possibility of a recession in the near to medium term. A recession is typically considered two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth.

“It is unfortunate that this GDP rate did not meet expectations, but unsurprising as the U.S. economy remains very volatile with geopolitical turbulence from the war in Ukraine, a global supply chain crisis, increasing inflation and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic,” Steve Rick, chief economist at CUNA Mutual Group, said in an email. “All of these factors have shrunk GDP growth rates around the globe.”


References:

  1. https://finance.yahoo.com/news/q1-us-gdp-gross-domestic-product-economic-activity-190926750.html

How the Economy Works by Ray Dalio

“Credit is important because it means borrowers can increase their spending. This is fundamental because one person’s spending is another person’s income.” Ray Dalio

Ray Dalio is one of most successful hedge fund managers and founder of Bridgewater Associates. He credits much of his success to guiding principles that he has used to make decisions both in his professional and in his personal life.

How the Economic Machine Works – “The economy is like a machine. At the most fundamental level it is a relatively simple machine, yet it is not well understood,” explains Ray Dalio.

Economic principles discussed:

  • Economy – The economy is simply the sum of all transactions repeated again and again over a long period of time. Money and credit account for the total spending in an economy.
  • Transactions – the exchange of money or credit between a buyer and seller for goods, services or financial assets.
  • Markets – “All buyers and sellers making transactions represent the market. For example, we have wheat markets, stock markets, steel markets, oil markets and so on.The combination of all of these sub-markets is the entire market, or the entire economy.” Ray Dalio
  • Governments – the biggest buyer and seller of goods, services and financial assets. The government consists of two parts: the central government that collect taxes and spend money; and, the central bank which controls the amount of money flowing through the economy. It does this by influencing interest rates and printing more money.
  • Central Bank – The Central Bank can only buy financial assets, not goods and services. To support the economy, the Central Bank buys Government bonds which gives the Central Government the ability to buy goods and service.
  • Price – the result of total spending / quantity sold.
  • Credit – Credit “is the most important part of the economy because it is the biggest and most volatile part”. Credit can be created out of thin air — in fact, in 2016, the US$50 trillion of the US$53 trillion in the economy was credit, as opposed to ‘real’ money. Credit is important because it means borrowers can increase their spending. This is fundamental because one person’s spending is another person’s income. Credit is bad when it finances over-consumption and borrowers are unable to pay the debt back.
  • Lenders – lend money to make more of it. When lenders believe borrowers will repay, credit is created.
  • Borrowers – borrowing is pulling spending forward which relates to borrowing money to buy something you can’t afford, such as a house, a car, a business or stocks. Borrowers promise to repay the amount borrowed (the principal) with interest. Borrowing creates cycles.
  • Debt – Debt allows you to consume more than you produce when it is acquired, and forces you to consume less when you have to pay it back. “When credit is issued it becomes debt. It’s a liability for the borrower, and an asset for the lender. It disappears when the transaction is settled.
  • Interest Rates – When interest rates are high, borrowing is low. When interest rates are low, borrowing is high.
  • Spending – one person’s spending is another person’s income. Total spending is the sum of money spent plus of credit spent.
  • Income – one person’s spending is another person’s income
  • Monetary Cycles – economy expansion and recession cycles.
  • Inflation – inflation is when prices rise. When spending is faster than the production of goods, it means that we have more demand than supply, which results in inflation.
  • Deflation – when spending decreases, prices tend to decline.
  • Expansion – growing markets and increasing transactions
  • Recession – Economic activity decreases, and if unchecked this can lead to a recession.
  • Bubbles – when the price of assets far exceed the value of the assets
  • Debt Burden – When incomes grow in relation to debt, things are kept in balance. But a debt burden emerges when debt growth exceeds income growth. This debt to income ratio is the debt burden.
  • Productivity – innovation and hard working raises productivity, which equates to the amount of goods and services produced.

Three rules of thumb for life

Source: Ray Dalio

According to Dalio, there are “three rules of thumb” with which to navigate the economy, be it in your own businesses, organisations you work at or your personal finances.

  1. Don’t have debt rise faster than income (because debt burdens will eventually crush you).
  2. Don’t have income rise faster than productivity — it will eventually render you uncompetitive.
  3. Do all you can to raise productivity — in the long run that’s what matters most.

References:

  1. https://www.nofilter.media/posts/ray-dalios-economic-machine-12-minute-summary
  2. https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1501124021/ref=as_li_qf_asin_il_tl_nodl?

Inflation – The Elephant Affecting the Economy

Historic inflation and interest rates hike fears are sinking many high growth technology stock prices. Inflation in 2021 was the consequences of rapidly rebounding demand in a supply-constrained world.

The fear of inflation and the the fear of subsequent Federal Reserve interest rate hikes are creating concern and panic among some investors. Rising interest rate and skyrocketing inflation worries are pressuring stocks. And by the Fed signaling raising rates in the future, it unsettles and sends both Wall Street and Main Street into a panic.

But, what is inflation?

Inflation is when consumer prices rise, goods and services become more expensive, and money loses value. Inflation reduces your purchasing power, eats away at your investment returns, and chips away at your wealth. Currently, Americans are experiencing the pernicious effects of inflation, especially in the areas of escalating food and energy prices.

2021 was one of the worst years for inflation that Americans have seen recently, with a 7% increase, the highest since 1982. For consumers, this means $1 at the beginning of the year was roughly worth only $0.93 at the end. While the impact might seem small when examining it on a dollar level, it represents a change in the purchasing power of retirement savings from January 2021 to December 2021. The Wall Street Journal’s Gwynn Guilford writes: “U.S. inflation hit its fastest pace in nearly four decades last year as pandemic related supply and demand imbalances, along with stimulus intended to shore up the economy, pushed price up at a 7% annual rate.”

American economist and Nobel prize laureate Milton Friedman opined that: “Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon.”  In other words, inflation is invariably a case of too much cheap money and capital chasing too few goods, services and assets.

In the last twenty years, the United States witnessed a large accumulation of federal public debt under Presidents Bush, Obama, Trump, and Biden administrations. Federal debt climbed from 55% of GDP in 2002 to 105% in 2019. Additionally, the U.S. has also endured a decade plus of loose monetary policy overseen by the Fed which has pumped up asset prices.

As a result of the escalating public debt and loose monetary policy, the Federal Reserve most important immediate task, of its dual mandates, must be to get inflation under control and reduced. Since 1977, the Federal Reserve has operated under a mandate from Congress to “promote effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long term interest rates”—what is now commonly referred to as the Fed’s “dual mandate.”

The Labor Department stated that the consumer-price index — which measures what consumers pay for goods and services — rose 7% in December from the same month a year earlier, up from 6.8% in November. That was the fastest growth in inflation since 1982 and marked the third straight month in which inflation exceeded 6%.”

Three sectors–energy/materials, financials and technology–may be viewed as inflation beneficiaries or, at the very least, inflation-agnostic assets:

  • Energy and materials are commodity-based, and oil, gas, and most commodities rebounded from prices that had fallen to a fraction of their pre-pandemic levels.
  • Financials, especially banks, are often viewed as inflation hedges since interest rates historically climb when inflation heats up. This reflects the eroding effect of higher prices on a currency’s value in the future, which is remedied by rate hikes on debt.
  • Technology is a more nuanced winner in the inflation game. The large tech players and most software companies have tremendous economies of scale. As their revenues scale, their costs, particularly labor, do not grow at nearly the same degree, cushioning profit compression from wage escalation.

In a book called “The Great Inflation”, the authors wrote, “Inflation is not an Act of God…inflation is man-made and can be started, prevented, regulated and stopped by human action.”

“To think that a stimulus of this magnitude wouldn’t cause inflation required believing either that such a huge adjustment was possible within a matter of months, or that fiscal policy is ineffective and does not increase aggregate demand. Both views are implausible”, says Jason Furman, former chair of President Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers.

Thus, slowing down in aggregate federal debt growth per capita, tightening monetary policy, and raising interest rates could be effective tools in stemming runaway inflation.

“If I was Darth Vader and I wanted to destroy the US economy, I would do aggressive spending in the middle of an already hot economy… What are you going to get out of this? You’re going to get a sugar high, the higher inflation, then an economic bust.” — Billionaire investor Stanley Druckenmiller, July 23, 2021


References:

  1. https://www.cnbc.com/2021/12/13/op-ed-these-3-market-sectors-shone-even-as-investors-grew-weary-of-hearing-about-inflation.html
  2. https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2021/12/is_joe_manchin_right_about_inflation.html
  3. https://seekingalpha.com/article/4479557-how-to-better-understand-inflation-and-predict-its-direction
  4. https://www.marketwatch.com/story/why-did-almost-no-one-see-inflation-coming-11642519667

Inflation: Biggest Threat to Investors and Market

“Inflation is not going to be transitory.” Paul Tudor Jones, Tudor Investment Founder

Recently on CNBC, Paul Tudor Jones, founder and chief investment officer of Tudor Investment Corporation, was extremely critical of current Federal Reserve policy. He opined that current Fed monetary policy and Administration fiscal policy are creating persistent inflation, instead of fighting existing inflation.

In his opinion, inflation could be worse than feared and is not transitory. “I think to me the number one issue facing Main Street investors is inflation, and it’s pretty clear to me that inflation is not transitory,” Jones said on CNBC’s “Squawk Box”. “It’s probably the single biggest threat to certainly financial markets and I think to society just in general.”

Additionally, Jones opined that inflation will be the death to 60 percent stocks / 40 percent bond portfolios favored by retirees. In his opinion, the Federal Reserve policy is creating inflation instead of fighting it. Instead, the Fed should be aggressively fighting inflation.

Currently, the Fed is slow and late fighting inflation.

Jason Furman, the former chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers and now a professor at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, contends that both economists, and the market, got inflation wrong in 2021. Furman explained that normal multipliers showed that the fiscal and monetary stimulus was well in excess of the economy’s potential to absorb. He expects inflation to remain “very elevated” because demand will be above trend, and the lag from Federal Reserve policy will mean any tightening won’t make an impact until next year anyway.

Consumer inflation expectations

A Sept. 2021 Federal Reserve Bank of New York survey shows Americans’ inflation rate expectations rising to their highest levels since the survey’s inception.

Consumer expectations for inflation rose to 5.3% over the next year and 4.2% over the next three years, according to the New York Fed. Both are the highest in the history of a data series that goes back eight years.

Powell has long held that inflation is being held in check by forces that the Fed has no control over – aging populations, lower productivity and advances in technology.

Powell’s five-point inflation checklist include:

  • Lack of broad-based pressures;
  • Lower moves in high-inflation items;
  • Low wage pressures;
  • Tepid inflation expectations, and
  • Long-lasting forces that have kept inflation low globally.

High technology companies stocks have underperformed the broader markets amid an increasing possibility of Federal Reserve rate hikes this year. Rising U.S. treasury yields have also recently put pressure on high growth tech names.

The valuations of many tech companies rely on the prospect of profits years in the future, and higher long-term Treasury yields typically discount the present value of future cash.


References:

  1. https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/savingandinvesting/here-s-the-market-move-cathie-wood-says-is-ridiculous-as-her-flagship-fund-sputters/ar-AASCrQL
  2. https://www.aeaweb.org/conference/2022/livecasts/inflation
  3. https://www.cnbc.com/2021/10/20/paul-tudor-jones-says-inflation-could-be-worse-than-feared-biggest-threat-to-markets-and-society.html