Fed Raises Rates 75 Basis Points; Europeans Back Immediate Peace

The big news of the week: on Wednesday, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) announced a rate increase of +0.75% (75 bp) to 1.75%. This was hinted at on Monday, and as per the Fed press conference at 14:30 Eastern on Wednesday, the rate increase was blamed on last week’s surprisingly hot CPI print (0.97% m/m, 11.64% annualized). It turns out, this week’s producer price index (PPIACO) looked 3 times worse (+3.03% m/m, which is 36.36% annualized). Powell told us in the press conference that another large rate increase might occur if the CPI came in with another hot reading next month.

Immediate effects: 30-year mortgage rates jumped by 50 basis points (bp) to 5.78%. We haven’t seen mortgage rates this high since 2008. I’m guessing the housing market will take a bit of a tumble in the next few months.

Crude fell 3 days out of 5, losing -9.72 [-8.20%], with most of the losses happening on Friday. You can see the crude OI (blue line) is at a multi-year low, which tells me that the banksters don’t want to take any large positions in crude.The banksters used to be ok with the “shorting the rallies” game (OI tops matched with price tops), but that trading game stopped in February.

The weekly candle print was a swing high/bearish reversal (64%), which is fairly bearish. Crude appears to be headed lower.

Natural gas was hit very hard, plunging an astonishing -1.78 [-20.32%], dropping to a 2-month low. Natgas also printed a weekly bearish reversal pattern (70%). Most of the week’s losses came on Tuesday; a fire in an LNG facility took out 2% of US natgas demand. (Note: LNG = natgas-for-export, so, a fire in a US LNG facility = more natgas for U.S. Plebes, and less for EU Plebes). The LNG facility fire actually happened last week, but the company reported on Tuesday that the plant restart would take until “late 2022.” Note: the instrument “NG” = futures for U.S. natgas. This week’s plunge is good news for US natgas buyers, and if it persists, should help U.S. inflation numbers. Eventually.

There sure are a lot of fires in plants these days.

Equities also plunged, with SPX falling -5.79% to a new multi-year low. Most of the damage happened on Monday - after the Fed hinted at that 75 bp rate increase, which then came true on Wednesday. The sector map looks mixed but mostly bearish (leaders down: energy -20.71%, utilities -9.97%, materials -9.01%). Financials and tech did (relatively) well, so it wasn’t a completely bearish map. Even after all the fuss, the VIX ended the week at 31, which - given the correction in progress - really isn’t all that bearish.

Doctor Copper also had a bad week, falling -5.84%, dropping to a new 4-month closing low. Copper dropped 4 days out of 5, with the only positive day being Fed Wednesday. Copper is more-than-hinting at a recession-to-come. That’s why we call it Doctor Copper: “I am diagnosing that the economy is catching a cold…”

Note copper prices are international, rather than being local to the U.S. Transport for copper is easy - just toss a bar into a ship or a plane, and you’re good. That doesn’t work for natgas.

Gold was absolutely pounded on Monday, but then rallied back for much of the rest of the week, ending down just -1.64% [-30.78]. Gold’s OI, which seems to matter more for gold than for most other traded items, is hinting at a low; the falling OI suggests to me that the banksters have been closing out their short positions over the last month or so regardless of the rallies. See how - before this month - peaks in OI almost always align with peaks in price for gold? And the valleys in OI align with the lows in price? And over the past four weeks, the OI has just been dropping, even though gold has rallied. That’s positive for gold. Probably. Eventually. Someday.

The buck rallied for the first part of the week, then fell on Thursday and Friday, ending the week up +0.44% [+0.46]. Call it mildly positive for the buck. International capital probably likes the prospect of higher rates for their USD deposits (10-year yield +6 bp to 3.21%), but there’s that recession on the horizon also.

A dollar rally is usually a “global risk off” signal, and/or a strong rate differential between USD and the other major currencies (EUR, GBP, JPY, etc). Probably both are happening here.

It all adds up to “hints of recession” - and due to Doctor Copper looking a little faint - not just a U.S. recession.

I also assume that Big Money over in Europe would much prefer the U.S. 1-year at 2.86%, vs the German 1-year at 0.46% - resulting in capital flows and a dollar rally. Theoretically. Assuming the EU doesn’t raise rates by 75 bp too.


Ukraine:

"Health": Democracy Dies in Darkness: U.S. Politics & Markets:
  • Ed Dowd did a back-of-the-envelope calculation on a "commercial fire rate" and compared it to the number of food processing plant fires we've seen in the U.S. Net-net: all these "food processing plant" fires are happening at a rate 382% above the "normal fire rate". Data: 36,000 processing plants, 97 fires, standard commercial fire rate 0.056%/year, this year's rate for processing plant fires: 0.27%. The year is only half over. "That's an awfully nice food processing plant you've got there..."
  • Crypto Hedge Fund Three Arrows Capital Fails to Meet Margin Calls This sort of thing leads directly to defaults, more price drops, and more defaults for leveraged players. My guess: unlike in 2008 and all that mortgage debt, the Fed will not be riding to the rescue.
  • 2000 Mules has moved the needle; "Among voters who have seen '2000 Mules', 85% of Republicans, 68% of Democrats and 77% of unaffiliated voters say the movie strengthened their conviction that there was systematic and widespread election fraud in the 2020 election." But not enough have seen it just yet.
Will Russia/Ukraine see negotiations relatively soon? It is hard to say. The Western Oligarchy will be dragged into the peace process kicking and screaming. Especially the U.S. The longer they put it off, the worse the terms will be.

Viewed through the lens of currency, it seems that Mister Price Hike (Putin) has already won his war, due to the destruction of the opposing military force. Will this result in a new anti-WEF group that forms around Russia? It seems like that’s already happening.

Since Feb. 2, 2022 vs. the USD: Ruble: 31% gain.

As someone who studied the cold war and geopolitics in general, the shocking ineptitude of the WEF/West in this entire affair is really astonishing. If you discard 60 years of history and experience, this is what you get. I never really quite understood how Rome fell. Now we’re seeing it happen in real time. It is due to a combination of traitors whose loyalties lie elsewhere, rank stupidity, and “the Disease of Victory”. Here’s a piece from 1968 on that same topic.

Build Back Better! Climate Change! No (food, heat, electricity, treatments, or transport) For You!

This is a companion discussion topic for the original entry at https://peakprosperity.com/fed-raises-rates-75-basis-points-europeans-back-immediate-peace/

Julian Assange

Democracy Dies in Darkness:

This is being discussed in the Australian version of the Guardian right now. Anthony Albanese (new PM) has just said that he will not do 'megaphone diplomacy' i.e. he will try and discuss things 'behind the scenes'.
But Bob Carr (former NSW premier and foreign minister) made a point that I think is very legitimate (apart from all the ones - like killing the profession of journalism - that have already been made:
If the Australian public sees pictures of Assange in chains on the tarmac, being put onto a CIA plane, when Chelsea Manning's sentence was commuted and she was pardoned by Obama, this will not go down well with the Australian public.
This, I think, is the understatement of the century
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Damn! I whoopsed my quotes - sorry!

Australian Energy Plants In Flames Too

‘There sure are a lot of fires in plants these days.’

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Yep we had a major outage in Perth over the weekend apparently the result of a foil party balloon (can you believe that?).

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Sorry…

I accidentally gave you zero stars dave fairtex! Can’t reverse my accidental rating for some reason. 5 stars all the way was my intention!

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Fed’s New Goal… Unemployment?

Today I glanced at a story at the Epoch Times. (Reuter’s version is here if you don’t subscribe) It is a brief recap of the Cleveland Fed President (Loretta Mester) statements regarding inflation and such on a CBS interview
Its not really worth the read but what caught my eye was her following statement: (Bold mine)

“We do have growth slowing to a little bit below trend growth and we do have the unemployment rate moving up a little bit. And that is OK, we want to see some slowing in demand to get it in line with supply,” 
So, since supplies are short so the Fed is now "OK" with rising unemployment due to inflation (which they caused with their printing). Hmmmm... According to their own website:
...congress has assigned the Fed to conduct the nation’s monetary policy to support the goals of maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates.
Their website goes on to give a convoluted definition of the phrase "maximum employment" which gives them plenty of weasel room and was probably not the way the intended meaning of congress way back when. I'm sure their jobs are not in jeopardy, albeit it would not be hard to argue they should be!
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Putin Not Against Ukraine In Eu?

Ukraine moves one step closer to EU membership. But – “Russian President Vladimir Putin suggested Russia would not oppose Ukraine’s accession to the EU.” If Putin is ok with Ukraine EU membership, it is a nothing-burger.
Am I missing something, or is Putin only against Ukraine in NATO?

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Oil Stocks

What a nasty week for oil stocks: today isn’t looking any better. Man am I kicking myself for not selling high. Been waiting for a bounce back day for get out of a few but it doesn’t look like that’s on the horizon.

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Correct. Putin doesn’t like, but doesn’t oppose Ukraine in EU. That’s an economic consortium. He’s opposed to Ukraine in a military union that specifically requires mutual defense. It’s because he’s watched US position weapons in countries as they join NATO and won’t tolerate them on his southern border. He’s got the same concerns about Finland, and has warned Finland and NATO about the necessity of Russia responding to any military hardening of Finland or Norway.

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Grandiosity

I never really quite understood how Rome fell. Now we’re seeing it happen in real time. It is due to a combination of traitors whose loyalties lie elsewhere, rank stupidity, and “the Disease of Victory”
I would add grandiosity to that list:
Grandiosity means you
~ believe your unique traits and talents set you above everyone else
~ consider yourself unstoppable, untouchable, or destined for great and important things
~ have persistent feelings of superiority
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Ukraine-related

Lithuania blocks the movement of Russian goods through their territory to Kaliningrad Oblast.
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/russia-warns-nato-member-lithuania-over-kaliningrad-transit-2022-06-20/

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Well, basically the Fed is 100% on the side of banks and ‘capital.’ By which I mean currency units.
When capital is running hot year after year and the wealthy are becoming ever wealthier the Fed shrugs and says “whatareyougonnado?” So, they do nothing. Capital can romp year after year and the Fed smiles upon it all.
But when labor finally catches a break? Oh man! That’s an emergency. The Fed kicks into high gear and says that labor costs have to be brought down, wages are too high, etc.
I mean, it’s completely obvious, isn’t it? The Fed hates little people. They love big capital. They are the courtiers for the modern kings and queens, providing an oily sheen of respectability to a massive looting operation.

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Gasoline And Jet Fuel Shortages (and Sky-high Costs) In West Africa And In Europe

I traveled to Senegal about a month ago. On the way back, my flight had to add a connection because the Dakar airport had no fuel. I spoke to other people at the airport and other flights faced the same issue. Dakar airport was advising airlines to make sure they had enough fuel upon arrival to make their return voyage, or to make arrangements to get fuel elsewhere. Dakar is not a backwater. It is a major city in West Africa. I am not certain if this is happening in other countries, but it is something to keep an eye on.
Also, I was in Denmark last week. We rented a compact hybrid car for a couple days. We used almost no fuel, but had to top it off before returning it to the rental car company. Less than 3 gallons cost us almost USD $30! It is a good thing the Danes like to ride bikes and have a good rail system. Things seemed to be operating normally there. I cannot imagine what $10/gallon gasoline would do to the US.

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1984 – Oceania Is At War With Eurasia – No We Are Friends With Eurasia.

I keep thinking that we are living in a world that is so similar to George Orwell’s 1984. Big Brother is assuring the people of victories of the armed forces over those of the despicable Eurasia. Then overnight we are friends with Eurasia and Eastasia is now the devil. I will not be surprised if in 6 months time, we are being told that Putin and Russia is our greatest friend. Certainly, the financial markets do not think that Russia is anywhere near defeat.  The USD is currently strong v the other major currencies, but the Russian rouble v the USD is the strongest it has been since July 2015 (when the USD evidently was recovering from a bout of major weakness).
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I think grandiosity and impunity must be friends.