Archive for December 2021
Terrific Trains
The Friday File: Since invented in Britain in 1804 and averaging less than 10 mph, trains have only gotten substantially faster. Japan’s “Bullet Train” in 1964 was the world’s first high-speed rail system and achieved a top speed of 125 mph; it now travels at 186 mph. Today, the world’s fastest train is Japan’s L0…
Read MoreGeopolitical Gyrations
The three most pressing geopolitical problems are Russia’s potential invasion of Ukraine, China’s potential invasion of Taiwan, and Iran’s dash to a nuclear device. Markets will largely ignore Russia/Ukraine as neither are global players and Europe won’t stop Russian energy flows. The China/Taiwan tiff is huge, and markets would respond badly for several economic and…
Read MoreRising Rates
Earlier today the Fed reduced the rate of its purchases of Treasuries and MBS by $20 billion/month and $10 billion/month respectively. Thus, in 3/22 tapering will conclude, paving the way for as many as three quarter-point rate hikes in CY2022, the first coming as early as 22Q2. The rationale; while supply-chain inflation will probably dissipate,…
Read MoreMonetary Mojo
While inflation is currently quite elevated, it is important to note that monetary policy works with lags of 12-18 months before the impact of rate changes are fully felt. Thus, the Fed would have had to (among other things) anticipate the severe supply-chain problems we have been experiencing and would have had to start raising…
Read MoreIncreasing Inflation
November CPI inflation came in at 6.8%, the highest reading since 6/82, core CPI came in 4.9% its highest since 5/91. Why? The combination of profound consumer demand and simultaneous massive supply-chain problems preventing supply from increasing. The last time this might have happened, immediately post-WWII. Add unemployment at just 4.2% and 21Q4 GDP expected…
Read MoreCar Continuity
The Friday File: The vehicle with the longest production run is the Chevrolet Suburban at 86 years. It began production in 1935. In second, the Ford F-Series at 74 and first came out in 1947. The Volkswagen Transporter follows at 71 and began production in 1950. The Toyota Land Cruiser follows at 70, the Chevrolet…
Read MoreJob Jumping
At the end of 10/21, the latest month for which data are available, there were 11 million US job openings compared to just 6.9 million unemployed persons, a ratio of 1.6 open jobs/unemployed person, OMG! Unsurprisingly, the quit rate is an astonishing 2.8%, meaning 4.2 million workers quit their jobs in October to presumably look…
Read MoreSino Syringes
While mRNA vaccines by Moderna and Pfizer-BioNtech are most effective against Delta variant with effectiveness rates of 90% or better against hospitalization and death, AstraZeneca’s and J&J’s vaccines follow at 80% or better. However, injections from Sinopharm/Sinovac appear to be the worst, with an effectiveness rate of roughly 59%. That, along with China’s unusual zero-tolerance…
Read MoreDwelling Deficit
The home ownership vacancy rate is 0.9%, the lowest rate since at least 1956. The rental vacancy rate is 5.8%, the lowest rate since 1984. Existing inventory is 1.27 million, the lowest October reading in over 20 years, built new inventory is at its lowest level since at least 1973, and the cost to buy…
Read MoreEmployment Expansion
US employers added 210,000 jobs in November (which will undoubtedly be revised upward next month) as labor demand slightly slowed and labor supply grew as the labor-force participation rate rose to 61.8%. As a result, wage growth slowed to 0.3% for the month, down from an average of 0.5%/month over the past seven months. With…
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