“The problem with fiat money is that
it rewards the minority that can handle money, but fools the generation that
has worked and saved money.”
“Adam Smith,” akaGeorge Goodman.
As expected, the US central bank raised its
key interest rate by a quarter of one percent. The European Central Bank is
expected to do the same later today.
In the stock casinos, more hopium that this
is the last or penultimate interest rate hikes from both central banks.
I hope the rate hikes will stop now too, but only
because I see a global recession arriving later this year, if it hasn’t already
started with manufacturing and a lack of EV sales leading the way.
Asian shares climb
after Fed hikes as expected; eyes on Europe, Japan
SYDNEY, July 27
(Reuters) - Asian shares advanced and the dollar fell on Thursday after a
well-flagged U.S. rate rise delivered no major surprises, although policymakers
in Europe and Japan could pose risks for markets with their own interest rate
decisions.
S&P
500 futures rose 0.2% while Nasdaq futures gained 0.5%, helped by a 6.8% jump
in Meta Platforms (META.O) in
after-hours trading. Facebook's parent company reported
a strong rise in advertising revenue, topping Wall Street targets.
During the
much-watched press conference, Chair Jerome Powell remained non-committal about
the prospects of a hike in the next meeting in September, though analysts said
a continued slowing of inflation and weaker economic data may prompt
policymakers to pause.
"Chair
Powell post the FOMC outcome started off sticking to script, but slowly morphed
to an acknowledgement that inflation has indeed fallen, the real rate had risen
and was indeed in a restrictive state," said Padhraic Garvey, regional
head of research, Americas, at ING.
----
The
European Central Bank is widely expected to raise interest rates for
the ninth time in a row on Thursday. The slow retreat in inflation is piling
pressure on policymakers to keep rates higher and for longer.
Another
major risk event this week is the Bank of Japan meeting on Friday amid
speculation of more tweaks to its ultra loose monetary policy. The majority
view is policymakers would hold steady, according
to a Reuters poll.
After the Fed
decision, markets continued to bet that the tightening is done, with futures
implying a slim chance - about 20% - that the central bank could surprise with
a quarter-point increase in September.
They also moved
to price in sizeable rate cuts of 125 basis points by the end of next year.
The Federal Reserve pushed interest rates to a 22-year high
Wednesday, one month after a brief respite in hikes during the central bank’s
race to bring down historic inflation.
The Fed
hiked its baseline interest rate range by 0.25 percent to a span of 5.25 to 5.5
percent. It is the Fed’s 11th interest rate hike since March 2022, a dizzying
ascent from near-zero interest rates at the beginning of last year.
All
11 voting members of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), the panel of Fed
officials charged with managing monetary policy, supported the rate hike.
Interest
rates are among the sharpest tools in the Fed’s toolbox to hack away at high
inflation, which is finally falling after squeezing consumers for the last two
years.
Inflation
peaked at 9.1 percent annually last June, a 40-year high that
sparked fears of a recession on
the horizon. Price growth has since fallen to 3 percent year over year as of
last month, according to consumer price data released by the Department of
Labor.
While this
is a marked improvement from the same period last year, Fed officials are wary
of pulling back on rate hikes before inflation is closer to the bank’s 2
percent annual target.
Fed
officials unanimously voted to pause in June after months of falling inflation,
but several members privately expressed support for hiking rates last month.
The economy is growing and adding jobs at a slower pace than before the Fed
began hikes, but still faster than
many economists expected it would after a series of rapid rate increases.
While
0.25 percent doesn’t sound like a lot, incremental rate hikes can have a
profound impact on the economy — and Americans’ wallets.
From
savings account yields to the cost of carrying a credit card balance, interest
rate hikes drive up the cost of borrowing in an effort to curb
inflation-driving spending.
Though
some Wall Street experts predicted rate hikes could tip the economy into
another recession, the prognosis
has improved.
Following the markets on both sides of the Atlantic since 1968. A dinosaur, who evolved with the financial system as it was perverted from capitalism to banksterism after the great Nixonian error of abandoning the dollar's link to gold instead of simply revaluing gold. Our money is too important to be left to probity challenged central banksters and crooked politicians.
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