Archive for 2022

ANDY KESSLER: THE HOT & COLD ECONOMY:

F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote that “the test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposing ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function.” George Orwell labeled the ability doublethink or indoctrination. Psychologists call it cognitive dissonance. I call it the current economy.

There are mixed signals everywhere. Inflation is running hot at an 8.5% annual rate—subtract food and energy and it’s 5.9%. Despite a string of long-overdue Federal Reserve rate hikes, credit is still loose and will be until short-term rates rise above inflation. At 2.25% to 2.5%, we have a way to go.

Prices are popping. Restaurants everywhere seem to have New York prices. Haircuts are more. Same for doctor’s bills, furniture and Uber rides. There’s still $5 rotisserie chicken, and the $1.50 hot-dog special, but it sure feels like Costco added a couple of bucks to every other item.

More heat: The U.S. economy added 315,000 jobs in August, and unemployment is 3.7% as workers are hard to find for the 11.2 million available jobs. Stores are closing or limiting hours owing to a lack of workers. And unionization is back, burdening Amazon, Starbucks and even Google’s cafeteria. A national railroad strike might hit soon.

Once wage hikes start, they are hard to stop. John Deere increased workers’ pay by 10% last November. Lowe’s is giving out $55 million in bonuses this quarter. I expect more pay increases of 10% to 15% over the next year. The new- and used-car market is still tight because of chip shortages, but that’s almost over. Container ships now are idling outside East Coast ports, as I observed flying into New York recently. Hot, hot, hot. . . .

But there are plenty of signs that the economy is weakening, most visibly at gas pumps. To whip inflation, rate hikes are becoming common. Chairman Jerome Powell said last month the Fed would take “forceful and rapid steps to moderate demand,” which might “bring some pain to households and businesses.” Ouch.

Beyond interest-rate bumps, the Fed is sitting on $9 trillion in reserves and running off $95 billion a month in Treasurys and mortgages. You can do the math: It will take five to seven years of quantitative tightening to return to more “normal” reserves. Continuous pain.

The average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage is now 5.9%, up from 2.9% a year ago. No wonder housing prices are dropping in many markets. Worse, new housing starts are headed south as mortgage payments become unaffordable for new buyers. This means construction job losses and lower demand for lumber, pipes, etc.

From Walmart to Target to Nordstom, retailers over-ordered and now face a glut of product. They are slashing prices to move it, even renting shipping containers to store their overstuffed inventory.

The pandemic and working from home pumped PC and laptop demand, but that is now cratering. Same for Peloton. Zoom usage is weakening. Chipmaker Nvidia announced a 17% shortfall in its sales outlook. Even Google had an earnings miss. Re/Max, Snap, Netflix, JPMorgan and many others are laying off employees.

Europe is a mess, with 10% or higher inflation in some countries. U.K. pub owners complain that their electricity bills are tripling. The Nord Stream pipeline is shut down, and winter is coming. China may be a bigger mess, with its flat-lining economy.

I feel like the people running the world aren’t doing an especially good job.

Plus: “Won’t all these weak economic signs douse the hot economy, killing inflation and allowing the Fed to stop raising interest rates? That mythical “soft landing”? I’m skeptical. Not to be a gloomy Gus, but here’s another scenario: Inflation persists. Rates rise. Credit tightens. Housing values drop. Corporate earnings miss. Recession continues. Earnings multiples contract. Layoffs accelerate. Wages stagnate. Then and only then will the Fed start lowering rates. That could happen in 2023, but it’s more likely to happen closer to the 2024 election.”

EAST CAROLINA U. TO N.C. TAXPAYERS: DROP DEAD. Land acknowledgements (you’d give the land back if you really thought you stole it), CRT, “inclusion” that just happens to mostly tell dissenters to shut up, you name it, at ECU’s faculty convocation this year. Wait a month and they’ll undoubtedly be upset that the state won’t give them more money, and totally mystified as to why.

SHOULDN’T BE A SURPRISE BUT IT IS: Millions of Americans still visit Mt. Rushmore these days despite the unceasing suppression of the American spirit, principles and history, according to The Epoch Times’ Allan Stein.

GOOGLE, IBM BACK OFF RACE-DRIVEN FELLOWSHIPS: They still require recipient colleges to award their generous graduate fellowships to diverse fields of recipients, but reporting by The Washington Free Beacon appears to have moved Google and IBM to drop their previous requirement that half of those awarded go to minorities.

HMM: Russia is facing defeat in Putin’s gas war against the European Union.

A week after Russian energy giant Gazprom suspended gas exports to Germany via Nord Stream 1, Russian President Vladimir Putin threatened on September 7 to cut remaining supplies and leave “the West to freeze” if it attempted to cap oil and gas prices. Such statements would have thrown markets into a spin and created political panic only a few months ago but that is now no longer the case. Instead, there are signs Putin may have overplayed his hand and could be about to lose his gas war against Europe.

For more than a year, Gazprom has kept European energy markets on tenterhooks. The Russian company reduced this year’s overall gas supplies to Europe by 40% compared to 2021, limiting exports to major buyers or completely suspending deliveries to companies or countries that refused to yield to political pressure. The tactic has pushed European gas prices to all-time highs, soaring ten times above the five-year average as companies and governments scrambled to find immediate solutions and avert an energy crisis of unprecedented proportions with winter looming.

However, Europe appears to be adjusting to Russia’s tactics. Although prices remain very volatile and well above the averages witnessed in recent years, they have already dropped more than 40% since reaching record highs at the start of September. Meanwhile, there are growing indications that markets are finding solutions to the new circumstances, inspiring cautious optimism that the coming winter season may not be as bleak as many in Europe initially feared.

I’m not buying this until we see what happens once the temperatures drop.

Regardless of how it turns out, the Germans were fools to shutter their nuclear plants — and even bigger fools for refusing to start them back up.

JEFF JACOBY ON BIDEN’S STUDENT LOAN FORGIVENESS:  Congress should sue.

JOHN TAMNY: The Myth That Mikhail Gorbachev ‘Ended the Cold War.’

All of this and more came to mind while reading the various obituaries and commentary on Mikhail Gorbachev, who died last week. Almost without fail the remembrances of Gorbachev indicated that he “ended the Cold War.” What a laugh. Gorbachev did no such thing.

As George Will put it in his own commentary, commentary that near uniquely didn’t embrace the Gorbachev hagiography, the man who oversaw the dismantling of the Soviet Union didn’t want to. Gorbachev very much believed in this intensely cruel, freedom suffocating, historically murderous nation, and wanted it to survive. Which is a reminder that Gorbachev didn’t “end the Cold War” as boldfaced thinkers like Maureen Dowd strangely asserted as much as reality intruded on Gorbachev’s anti-human, and rather naïve understanding of humanity. Really, imagine wanting to maintain such a failed country defined by what Hedrick Smith described in The Russians as “lines for everything.”

With Reagan, it wasn’t about whether the Soviet Union would survive. Reagan knew it would not.

Read the whole thing.