Anyone who's anyone knows that tomorrow is Fed day, the pre-scheduled meeting when our central bank announces their latest policy decision on interest rates. A 75 basis point hike is a near guarantee, which would bring the overnight rate fed funds rate to 4%.
The big question is what will the Fed signal for the December meeting and how aggressive will the Fed’s tone be?
It’s a sign of how broken markets have become, that the fate of the world economy hinges on the decision of 12 men and women who meet behind closed doors every six weeks to determine how much they will manipulate the amount of money in the global system. Yet, every six weeks we at Brentwood Research have covered the farcical play.
We began our regular writings three years ago to shine a light on the financial engineering that we believed was taking place in our financial system. The full faith and credit of the United States is built on the strength of our ability to finance our spending. As we have discovered, the financial manipulation we were seeking to expose has not diminished over time, it’s crescendoed into a symphony of outright orchestration happening in plain view. It’s also provided us with wisdom.
We have learned that a secret, when made public, loses its power.
Markets that were once determined by fundamentals like revenue and growth are today exclusively about one thing: what the Federal Reserve decides to do with interest rates and their balance sheet. We no longer question why, that’s just how it is.
Before tomorrow’s interest rate announcement is even made, computer algorithms will pre-read the Fed’s policy decision, and within milliseconds, each word and syllable in the Fed’s statement will be parsed by artificial intelligence. Bet the farm that at 2pm EST tomorrow we will witness tremendous volatility as massive amounts of capital buy and sell ‘on the news’ of rate hikes. It will all take place before the spoken words can even get out of the mouth of CNBC’s, Steve Liesman.
Thirty minutes later, at 2:30pm the world will tune in to hear the most powerful man alive, Jerome Powell, reading from a finely tuned statement which will share the message on the direction of Fed’s interest rate policies. Markets will once again gyrate as algorithms move billions of dollars in mere milliseconds. Newcomers watching the event for the first time might be amazed at how the indices begin to look like EKG machines surging up and down signaling a cardiac arrest. For those of us who have been watching, this is the new par for the course.
Shortly after Powell’s prepared statement, the real fun will begin. This is when the world’s most powerful man will go off script and open the floor for questions. This is the most critical moment to the day. It’s when we all discover how good of an actor our lead central banker really is. J-Pow’s performance and tonality will determine the financial fortunes of the global economy.
Does it all sound dramatic, crazy and over the top?
A few years ago, almost nobody was aware of the power of the Fed. Tomorrow the world will sit in awe of their tremendous might. While many market participants now understand it really is all about the Fed, few recognize that the entire show has become a verifiable Ponzi scheme. This becomes critical information for those seeking a preview on what comes next.
For the last seven months, as the Fed has aggressively raised rates to fight the inflation that they themselves caused, and then claimed came out of nowhere and “caught them by surprise,” and, has since helped them “understand how little they understand” about it all, we at Brentwood Research have continued to remind our readers that intentionally raising interest rates into our overleveraged economy would crush stocks and bonds and put our U.S. fiscal situation into a self-replicating death spiral which would crush the economies of the U.S as well as our G7 allies.
We have also been promising the day when the Fed would be forced to slow down, pause, and eventually pivot, and that once that time arrived, we would witness the dollar slip and fall causing precious metals and other tangible commodities to soar.
We believe that moment has arrived. We are not alone it seems. Insiders on Wall Street are expecting a lighter touch from the Federal Reserve tomorrow. Anticipation of imminent Fed easing has been the catalyst which has driven the equity markets higher over the last several weeks.
In October, the Dow Jones recorded its best month since 1976, rising a glorious 14%. The Russell 2000 notched gains of 11%. The S&P 500 rose 8% for the month. The rise in equities over the past week has been further fueled by rumors from high net worth clients at Blackrock, and coupled with recent Wall Street Journal articles from Fed “whisperer” Nick Timiraos, that have driven speculation there would be “dovish language” inserted into tomorrow’s policy decision.⁽¹⁾
Even the most bearish on Wall Street are expecting a shift in Fed tone.
According to Mike Wilson at JP Morgan, the analyst who has been the most prescient in his bearish market calls and who predicted that the S&P 500 would fall to 3200 points in the face of aggressive central bank tightening, has turned short term bullish. In a note published Monday, he wrote; “Indicators including the inversion of the yield curve between 10-year and three-month Treasuries—a recession indicator with a perfect record support a Fed pivot sooner rather than later,” His conclusion was that a dovish Fed could spark a 10% rally this Wednesday.
If you are wondering why the central bank might indicate they are slowing down in their fight against inflation, you may be asking the wrong question. It’s not a message the Fed wants to send, it’s that the pain from continuation and the imminent recession they have already caused, which is now too sharply being felt here at home and around the world, that may force their hand.
Recession indicators are flashing red everywhere.
Back in March, we explained to our subscribers the importance of yield curve inversions. We pointed out that curve inversions occur when central banks raise rates into slowing economies. When this happens the yields on shorter-term bonds rise more than those on longer-dated maturities. The most important inversion, and the one that signals an imminent recession 100% of the time going back to the 1980s, is the spread between the 3-month and the 10-year treasury bond.⁽²⁾ This is one of the primary data points that the Federal Reserve uses for their interest rate calculations, and a harbinger that the Fed has already tightened too much causing the economy to fall into recession.
Where are we now? Yesterday the yield on the 10 yr treasury stood 20 basis points lower than that offered by the 3-month treasury.⁽³⁾ This inversion is a sure sign that the Federal Reserve has made a monumental mistake. It’s one they will need to correct sooner than later. It’s why market experts are expecting a dovish tilt.
The real economy is suffering. Two years ago, while 30-year mortgage rates stood at 2.8% the average price of a home was $395,000. That was when the housing boom took off. It was driven by an aggressive Federal Reserve buying hundreds of billions of dollars worth of mortgage-backed securities. Today the average price of a home is $518,000 and the 30 yr mortgage rate is 7.08%. In 24 months, buyers have seen an increase of $25,000 in their down payments (assuming 20% down) and monthly payments rise from $1298 to $2779. This is causing a steep decline in the housing market.⁽⁴⁾
In an article released yesterday on Bloomberg, citing data from a survey by Boston-based Alignable, more than one-third of US small businesses are behind on the rent.⁽⁵⁾ About 37% of small businesses, which between them employ almost half of all Americans working in the private sector, were unable to pay their rent in full in October. The numbers get even worse for the restaurant industry. About 49% of restaurants were unable to pay their rent this month, up from 36% in September, while 37% of real estate agents couldn’t pay their rent, up from 27% last month.
It’s not just housing and small businesses feeling the pain.
As we know, the Fed’s tightening has caused a large selloff in stocks. The far more important data to watch, however, is not that tracking equities, but rather the performance of the treasury market. The bond market has suffered far more trauma than at any time in the last 244 years. It is well summed up by the chart below which shows that this is the worst year since 1788 for what has come to be known as the “safest’ security in the world; the 10-year Treasury.
While the 10-year Treasury may be considered safe, it’s sure lost a ton of value!
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