> Real worker earnings fell by another 0.8% during the month as the cost of living outpaced otherwise strong pay gains.
Most post-WWII recessions were preceded by or coincident with a spike in CPI (and not coincidentally by record-low unemployment numbers). This point is widely overlooked and plain forgotten. A substantial CPI-spike preceded the GFC, for example.
Way too much attention is being focused on the Fed at this point. The Fed is pretty much a bystander engaged in a psychological operation on the American Public. It talked up the current stock market bubble with its pointless QE and now it's in the process of talking down the bubble as gently as it knows how.
Meanwhile markets are telling you what's about to happen. The inversion of the Eurodollar curve in late 2021 and Treasury yield curve more recently are telling you that a recession is on the way. The speed with which interest rates have been fluctuating tells you that something big could be in the works. The sudden appearance of large amounts of housing inventory, partially resulting from spikes in long-term rates tells you that market is peaking. Overvaluation of the stock market by just about any metric (e.g., "the Buffett Indicator") tells you that the bull market is transitory.
And of course, there's falling real wages, which the article notes. 0.8% MoM decreases in purchasing power are not sustainable. Consumer spending makes up the majority of the US economy. Give people less to spend and they start going into debt to keep up appearances. Take away their job during a recession, and they default on those debts.
Every time these kinds of warnings flash, spinmeisters write them off as peculiarities of the current situation. Every time, there's a reason this time is different. It never is.
As someone who's currently feeling left out of the housing market and who thinks the stock market has been pants-on-fire insane for the last 2 years of covid... I pray for a recession so I can actually own a home.
Most post-WWII recessions were preceded by or coincident with a spike in CPI (and not coincidentally by record-low unemployment numbers). This point is widely overlooked and plain forgotten. A substantial CPI-spike preceded the GFC, for example.
Here's a handy chart to look into this further:
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/CPIAUCSL#0
Way too much attention is being focused on the Fed at this point. The Fed is pretty much a bystander engaged in a psychological operation on the American Public. It talked up the current stock market bubble with its pointless QE and now it's in the process of talking down the bubble as gently as it knows how.
Meanwhile markets are telling you what's about to happen. The inversion of the Eurodollar curve in late 2021 and Treasury yield curve more recently are telling you that a recession is on the way. The speed with which interest rates have been fluctuating tells you that something big could be in the works. The sudden appearance of large amounts of housing inventory, partially resulting from spikes in long-term rates tells you that market is peaking. Overvaluation of the stock market by just about any metric (e.g., "the Buffett Indicator") tells you that the bull market is transitory.
And of course, there's falling real wages, which the article notes. 0.8% MoM decreases in purchasing power are not sustainable. Consumer spending makes up the majority of the US economy. Give people less to spend and they start going into debt to keep up appearances. Take away their job during a recession, and they default on those debts.
Every time these kinds of warnings flash, spinmeisters write them off as peculiarities of the current situation. Every time, there's a reason this time is different. It never is.