What Did We Learn This Week? (07/14)—Tim Pierotti, Chief Investment Strategist
It’s over. That’s the message from Blackrock’s 2022 Midyear Outlook. The economists and strategists at the world’s largest asset manager with a tidy $10 Trillion of AUM wrote,
What Did We Learn This Week? (07/08)—Tim Pierotti, Chief Investment Strategist
Let’s start with what we already knew coming into this week. We knew that financial conditions have gone from historically easy to historically tight in an incredibly short period of time. We knew the Fed isn’t letting off the gas until clear signs emerge that inflation is under control. Don’t forget, that includes wage inflation. While commodities might be breaking down and that helps, the Fed is a long way from seeing the kind of labor market softening they are going to need to start jawboning to the market that they might be pulling up on rate hikes. As evidenced by the yield curve inversion, fear of an imminent recession has trumped fear of runaway inflation.
What Did We Learn This Week? (6/29)—Tim Pierotti, Chief Investment Strategist
The most important thing I learned this week (besides never grab hold of a skillet on a 500 degree grill) is that the people arguing that Fed will lose their nerve early and Fed Funds wont get over 3% are going to be wrong. I say that even in the context of observing commodity disinflation and continued leading indicator weakness that suggest we are sliding toward recession and curve inversion. Chairman Powell, Cleveland Fed's Mester as well as the Bank of International Settlements, which issued their annual economic report this week, are all singing from the same hymnal.
What Did We Learn This Week?- (06/27/22)—Tim Pierotti, Chief Investment Strategist
The Fed will successfully destroy demand. Gasoline prices may not come down meaningfully anytime soon due to the structural supply issues we discussed last week. Job openings may well stay elevated for months to come and consumer spending will continue to benefit from the dwindling stockpile of savings from fiscal stimulus and the vestiges of QE. But in one very important sector of the economy, the Fed's efforts to cool demand are already playing out. That sector is housing (OER/Shelter) which represents roughly 40% of the data that goes into CPI. To state the obvious, interest rates matter to housing and a doubling of long-term interest rates matters a lot.
Tim Pierotti and Drew Dokken: Oil Update June 2022
Tim and Drew go over the outlook of oil and gas markets. For more from Tim Pierotti, WealthVest's Chief Investment Strategist subscribe to our podcast WealthVest: The Weekly Bull and Bear at https://shows.acast.com/the-weekly-bull-and-bear or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
What did we learn this week?-Tim Pierotti, Chief Investment Strategist
The Fed will successfully destroy demand. Gasoline prices may not come down meaningfully anytime soon due to the structural supply issues we discussed last week. Job openings may well stay elevated for months to come and consumer spending will continue to benefit from the dwindling stockpile of savings from fiscal stimulus and the vestiges of QE. But in one very important sector of the economy, the Fed's efforts to cool demand are already playing out. That sector is housing (OER/Shelter) which represents roughly 40% of the data that goes into CPI. To state the obvious, interest rates matter to housing and a doubling of long-term interest rates matters a lot.
June Energy Prices Insights—Tim Pierotti, Chief Investment Strategist
This week, we focused on trying to better understand the potential durability of higher energy prices.
As a reminder, at WealthVest, we have a long-term view that potential GDP growth is going lower. That means, we see a real GDP growth rate that will average below 2% and an inflation backdrop that will be consistently problematic, quite unlike the grinding decline of inflation over the last four decades. For what it's worth, this is an increasingly non-controversial view among academic economists, but not one that is yet embraced more broadly on Wall Street.