Ah, a fellow traveler.
From Philip Pilkington, free-range economist, via ZeroHedge, September 9:
2/ I barely need to highlight how many leading indicators are screaming ‘recession’ in the US. Let’s just look at PMIs. Manufacturing PMI is at 47.6, worse than the beginning of the 2008 recession. pic.twitter.com/xyMmtw97BV
— Philip Pilkington (@philippilk) September 7, 2023
4/ Yield curves signal financial conditions, not real economic ones. But the yield curve is at pre-Great Depression levels. pic.twitter.com/SNX41nruXJ
— Philip Pilkington (@philippilk) September 7, 2023
6/ The other day a friend asked me is this normal. And I started to think just how abnormal it is. Then I started to think: maybe its all fake. pic.twitter.com/MnBY121VeC
— Philip Pilkington (@philippilk) September 7, 2023
8/ Spending is being driven, in part at least, by the Biden admin’s IRA. The Treasury is bragging about how the act has unleashed a building boom. pic.twitter.com/cve2O7CCYL
— Philip Pilkington (@philippilk) September 7, 2023
10/ This would explain why we’ve seen an unusual dip in productivity since the end of 2021. The growth is simply fake. A sort of economic Potemkin Village - quite literally in fact because the government are paying people to build things with no current market value. pic.twitter.com/1CnGyEZ6lK
— Philip Pilkington (@philippilk) September 7, 2023
....MUCH MORE
Related:
July 16: "Why Does The U.S. Economy Need $154 Billion-737 Million In Stimulus PER MONTH?" which ended with our market recommendation: Keep on Dancing.
August 11My Spidey sense is tingling.
In markets and across wider domains it is starting to feel as if there is a rug-pull coming.
Actually multiple rug-pulls.
It is not here yet, still nebulous and somewhere out on the horizon but the outlines are starting to come into focus....
Big Money: "U.S. Budget Deficit: July Data"
J.P. Morgan was wrong to call it "stealth" stimulus. It's not stealth, it's right there out in the open for all the world to see.
The fact that it is stimulus is not in question. Every penny of deficit spending is stimulus....
And a random sampling of related posts:
The Diminishing Marginal Productivity of Debt in the U.S.
The Real Problem With Stimulus
Mohamed El-Erian: "The Growth Engines Are Sputtering"
We are in a situation where years worth of economic growth have been pulled forward from future years by deficit spending, call it stimulus, call it sweet, sweet Biden love, whatevs; and the only way to keep the hamster wheel spinning is to keep feeding money into the system.
And have I mentioned marginal productivity of debt?* ....
And as patient reader is well aware the smallest state is Delaware we have been beating this drum since the bailouts of the Great Financial Crisis.
It doesn't really matter what you call it:
The Real Problem With Stimulus
I've mentioned a few times that Keynes was all about the countercyclical thing.
In the U.S. we have devolved to perma-stimulus, every dollar of deficit spending being stimulus, and have no plans to ever stop. Anyone who argues that stimulus isn't stimulus unless it is labeled stimulus is being sillier than I felt when I typed this sentence.
Deficit spending is stimulus whether you call it ARRA,sweet, sweet Biden loveor Democracy's flaw.....
June 15 reporting on the May deficit:
"US Budget Gap Widens to $1.2 Trillion in Fiscal Year Through May"
Keeping
in mind that every penny of deficit spending is stimulus, why does the
U.S. economy need over $100 billion of stimulus per month in what is
considered by many commentators to be a good economy?
"Reflections On ‘Political Capitalism’"
From New Left Review, Issue 142, July/August 2023...
New Left Review?
September 8
"U.S. deficit explodes even as economy grows"
When the WaPo deigns to notice, you know something is up....
September 15
"US Government Runs Budget Surplus In August, But..."
Every penny of spending that isn't covered by taxes is stimulus. Full stop. And the way things have evolved, the stimulus cannot be allowed to stop or the whole system—it's not capitalism, I'm not sure what to call it—the whole system collapses.
And another fellow traveler:
"Citadel's Ken Griffin admits doubts about stock market, economy: ‘I’m a bit anxious’"
From Reuters via the New York Post, September 14:
Billionaire investor Ken Griffin, founder of hedge fund Citadel, said on Thursday that he has some doubts about the continuity of the markets rally and is concerned about the US fiscal situation.
“I’m a bit anxious that this rally can continue,” he said in an interview on CNBC. “I like to believe that this rally has legs. I’m a bit anxious. We’re sort of in the seventh or eighth inning of this rally, but part of it has been the soft landing story.”
The S&P 500 stock index is up 16.8% this year, in a rally mainly driven by optimism around artificial intelligence.
Griffin said the Federal Reserve is likely close to the end of the interest rate hiking cycle in its battle to tame inflation. “There’s a small chance of one more increase later this year,” he said.
Still, he said it is unclear when Fed chair Jerome Powell will be able to cut rates because of some ongoing stimulus measures....
....MUCH MORE
And many, many more.