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U.S. growth slowdown, with inflation spike, raises early stagflation risks

The economy is slowing but inflation isn’t. That’s not good for anyone.

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Growth in the U.S. economy slowed notably last quarter as consumers tightened their belts and companies ran down inventories amid concern about a broad slump in demand over the coming months.

The world's biggest economy expanded by an annualized rate of 1.6%, down from the 3.4% pace recorded over fourth-quarter 2023, data from the Commerce Department showed on April 25. The latest figure was well south of Wall Street's 2.5% forecast. 

Perhaps more worrying for both government officials and policy makers at the Federal Reserve, however, was the parallel spike in inflation pressure, with the central bank's preferred gauge rising by a faster-than-expected 3.7% over the three-month period.

Mike Reynolds, vice president of investment strategy at Glenmede, says President Joe Biden might need to accelerate government spending, "as is typical in years when a sitting president seeks reelection." The idea would be to offset the impact of the Fed's elevated lending rate, which currently sits at a two-decade high of between 5.25% and 5.5%.

"Another positive GDP print adds another notch to the belt for the soft-landing argument, though the risk of recession still remains higher than normal given the tight stance of monetary policy," he said. 

"Fiscal stimulus has, so far, provided an offset to monetary-policy headwinds and is likely to continue to help broaden the pathway to soft landing." A soft landing for the economy would show slowing inflation but no recession.   

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell has pushed back on market bets for a series of 2024 rate cuts, arguing that inflation pressures remain elevated in the world's biggest economy.

Tom Williams/Getty Images

But the overall leap in price pressures followed a series of warnings from Fed officials over the past few weeks that they're still seeking "confidence" in the notion that inflation is heading back toward the central bank's preferred 2% target. 

And that has markets even more concerned. 

'Stubborn inflation and stifled growth': Stagflation 

"It’s one thing to have moderate inflation with above-average growth," said Bret Kenwell, U.S. investment analyst at eToro. "It’s another thing to have stubborn inflation and stifled growth, which has to be the Fed’s top concern at this point in the rate cycle." 

Slowing growth and faster inflation raise the specter of stagflation in an economy that, given its reliance on consumer spending, can be significantly damaging.

“Stagflation is a growing risk after GDP missed and the price index surprised to the upside," said David Russell, global head of marketing strategy at TradeStation. "If inflation isn’t getting better with such a weak growth, you have to wonder if the trend toward lower prices will continue." 

Related: Wall Street faces make-or-break week with Tesla, GDP, inflation on deck

"The bump in [Treasury-security] yields after the report suggests rate cuts are increasingly in doubt,” he added.

Yields on benchmark 2-year notes, the most-sensitive to changes in interest-rate forecasts, rose 9 basis points (0.09 percentage point) following the GDP and inflation data to change hands at 5.014%, their highest since last November. Ten-year yields hit a fresh five-month peak of 4.731%

Rate traders also responded to the Commerce Department data by pushing back their forecasts for a Fed rate cut until at least November and possibly beyond. They also pared the number of rate reductions expected this year to just one.

"The hot inflation print is the real story in this report," Fitch Ratings analysts wrote. "If growth continues to slowly decelerate but inflation strongly takes off again in the wrong direction, the expectation of a Fed interest rate cut in 2024 is starting to look increasingly more out of reach." 

The odds of a June rate cut, a virtual lock earlier this year, have collapsed to just 9.4%, based on data from CME Group's FedWatch. None of the four Fed meetings between July and December indicate a higher than 45% chance of a quarter-point reduction.

Sharper consumer-spending slowdown?

Jeffrey Roach, chief economist for LPL Financial in Charlotte, says details of the first-quarter GDP estimate suggest a weaker growth rate on the horizon. But he sees inflation pressure moderating at the same time.

"The economy will likely decelerate further in the following quarters as consumers are likely near the end of their spending splurge," he said. "Savings rates are falling as sticky inflation puts greater pressure on the consumer."

"We should expect inflation will ease throughout this year as aggregate demand slows, although the path to the Fed’s 2% target still looks a long ways off," Roach said.

Related: No landing, no Fed rate cuts: the markets' new bet on 2024

Ian Shepherdson of Pantheon Macroeconomics agrees that pandemic-era savings have largely been depleted. He noted that "only the very wealthiest households still have substantial excess that can be tapped to support consumption," which also leads to slower consumption over the back half of the year.

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He also argues that this should help blunt inflation pressure, as wage gains moderate and year-on-year comparisons support lower overall readings.

"It’s a close call, but we still see a path to the first Fed rate cut in June if, as we expect, the next two labor-market reports show job growth is slowing markedly and the [consumer-price index] reports are benign," he said.

The Bureau of Economic Analysis will publish its March PCE inflation report on Friday, April 26. Analysts are looking for a core and headline reading of 2.6%, down from 2.8% and 2.5% respectively over the month of February. 

Related: Veteran fund manager picks favorite stocks for 2024

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Cashless Society: WEF Boasts That 98% Of Central Banks Are Adopting CBDCs

Cashless Society: WEF Boasts That 98% Of Central Banks Are Adopting CBDCs

Whatever happened to the WEF?  One minute they were everywhere…

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Cashless Society: WEF Boasts That 98% Of Central Banks Are Adopting CBDCs

Whatever happened to the WEF?  One minute they were everywhere in the media and now they have all but disappeared from public discourse.  After the pandemic agenda was defeated and the plan to exploit public fear to create a perpetual medical autocracy was exposed, Klaus Schwab and his merry band of globalists slithered back into the woodwork.  To be sure, we'll be seeing them again one day, but for now the WEF has relegated itself away from the spotlight and into the dark recesses of the Davos echo chamber. 

Much of their discussions now focus on issues like climate change or DEI (Diversity, Equity, Inclusion), but one vital subject continues to pop up in the white papers of global think tanks and it's a program that was introduced very publicly during covid.  Every person that cares about economic freedom should be wary of Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) as perhaps the biggest threat to human liberty since the attempted introduction of vaccine passports.

The WEF recently boasted in a new white paper that 98% of all central banks are now pursuing CBDC programs.  The report, titled 'Modernizing Financial Markets With Wholesale Central Bank Digital Currency', notes:

“CeBM is ideal for systemically important transactions despite the emergence of alternative payment instruments...Wholesale central bank digital currency (wCBDC) is a form of CeBM that could unlock new economic models and integration points that are not possible today.”

The paper primarily focuses on the streamlining of crossborder transactions, an effort which the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) has been deeply involved in for the past few years.  It also highlights an odd concept of differentiated CBDC mechanisms, each one specifically designed to be used by different institutions for different reasons.  Wholesale CBDCs would be used only by banking institutions, governments and some global corporations, as opposed to Retail CBDCs which would be reserved for the regular population.

How the value and buying power of Wholesale CBDCs would differ is not clear, but it's easy to guess that these devices would give banking institutions a greater ability homogenize international currencies and transactions.  In other words, it's the path to an eventual global currency model.  By extension, the adoption of CBDCs by governments and global banks will ultimately lead to what the WEF calls "dematerialization" - The removal of physical securities and money.  The WEF states:

"As with the Bank of England’s (BOE) RTGS modernization programme, the intention is to introduce a fully digitized securities system that is future-proofed for incremental adoption of DLT (Distributed Ledger Technology). The tokenization of assets involves creating digital tokens representing underlying assets like real estate, equities, digital art, intellectual property and even cash. Tokenization is a key use case for blockchain, with some estimates pointing towards $4-5 trillion in tokenized securities on DLTa  by 2030." 

Finally, they let the cat out of the bag:

"The BIS proposed two models for bringing tokenization into the monetary system: 1) Bring CBDCs, DTs and tokenized assets on to a common unified ledger, and 2) pursue incremental progress by creating interlinking systems.

They determined the latter option was more feasible given that the former requires a reimagination of financial systems. Experimentation with the unified ledger concept is ongoing."

To interpret this into decoded language - The unified ledger is essentially another term for a one world digital currency system completely centralized and under the control of global banks like the BIS and IMF.  The WEF and BIS are acknowledging the difficulty of introducing such a system without opposition, so, they are recommending incremental introduction using "interlinking systems" (attaching CBDCs to paper currencies and physical contracts and then slowly but surely dematerializing those assets and making digital the new norm).  It's the totalitarian tip-toe.   

The BIS predicts there will be at least 9 major CBDCs in circulation by the year 2030; this is likely an understatement of the intended plan.  Globalists have hinted in the past that they prefer total digitization by 2030.

A cashless society would be the end game for economic anonymity and freedom in trade.  Unless alternative physical currencies are widely adopted in protest, CBDCs would make all transactions traceable and easily interrupted by governments and banks.  Imagine a world in which all trade is monitored, all revenues are monitored and transactions can be blocked if they are found to offend the mandates of the system.  Yes, these things do happen today, but with physical cash they can be circumvented. 

Imagine a world where your ability to spend money can be limited to certain retailers, certain services, certain products and chosen regions based on your politics, your social credit score and your background.  The control that comes with CBDCs is immense and allows for complete micromanagement of the population.  The fact that 98% of central banks are already adopting this technology should be one of the biggest news stories of the decade, yet, it goes almost completely ignored.   

Tyler Durden Thu, 04/25/2024 - 05:45

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Bankrupt fast-food chain exits Chapter 11; to expand size 4 times

The Boston-based fast-food chain said it will exit bankruptcy this week with plans to expand its locations by four times over a five-year period.

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Financial distress in the restaurant industry has led several fast-food and fast casual chains to file for bankruptcy, with businesses reorganizing, selling their assets or shutting down permanently.

Fast-casual Tex-Mex chain Tijuana Flats Restaurants on April 19 filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of Florida, with ambitious plans to turn around the company that included selling the company to a new ownership group and closing 11 of its locations.

Related: Luxury appliance retailer files Chapter 7 bankruptcy to liquidate

The new owners, Flatheads LLC, purchased the restaurant chain from TJF USA LLC with a plan to revitalize its restaurants and reinvigorate the customer experience.

Another restaurant chain had more depressing plans, as fast casual restaurant chain Foxtrot and Dom’s Kitchen & Market, with 33 locations across the nation, on April 23 revealed that it was abruptly filing Chapter 7 bankruptcy liquidation and shutting down all of its locations immediately. The reason for the filing was unclear, according to reports.

While struggling restaurant chains file bankruptcy, close down locations, and in some cases go out of business, a popular Boston fast-food chain is bucking that trend and intends to emerge from Chapter 11 with a plan to expand its footprint in New England by four times.

Clover Food Lab vegetarian dish.

Clover Food Lab

Fast food restaurant emerges from bankruptcy

Boston-based vegetarian fast-food restaurant chain Clover Food Lab filed for Chapter 11 Subchapter 5 bankruptcy in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for District of Delaware on Nov. 3, 2023, to reorganize its business as its sales did not fully recovered from the effects of the Covid pandemic, according to its website.

In addition to lower than expected sales, the company in court papers said that high rent for its locations and inadequate funding as a result of the failure of Silicon Valley Bank contributed to the chain's distress.

The restaurant chain had planned to raise capital to expand in New England and into New York but the fallout from the failure of Silicon Valley Bank resulted in its financing plans to collapse. The debtor said that high rents and low sales at three of its locations led it to seek lease concessions from its landlords, which was unsuccessful and forced the company to file bankruptcy.

The restaurant chain opened in 2008 as a single food truck on the Massachusetts Institute of Technology campus in Cambridge, Mass., and offers an organic, vegetarian menu that "changes by the minute to keep up with daily available produce from farms in New England," according to Clover Food Lab's website. The company had 15 locations when it filed its Chapter 11 petition, but closed locations in Boston's Copley Square and Somerville's Assembly Row during its reorganization.

Clover Food Lab in a April 24 statement said that it will emerge from Chapter 11 Subchapter V bankruptcy this week with a five-year plan to add 47 new stores, initially opening locations in the Greater Boston area and then elsewhere in New England. It will focus on smaller outlets in urban areas and around universities, the statement said according to Boston Restaurant Talk. The expansion will grow the chain from 15 locations when it filed bankruptcy to 60 outlets after a five-year period.

Related: Veteran fund manager picks favorite stocks for 2024

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Philly Fed: State Coincident Indexes Increased in 44 States in March (3-Month Basis)

From the Philly Fed:

The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia has released the coincident indexes for the 50 states for March 2024. Over the
past three months, the indexes increased in 44 states, decreased in five states, and remained stable in one,…

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From the Philly Fed:
The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia has released the coincident indexes for the 50 states for March 2024. Over the past three months, the indexes increased in 44 states, decreased in five states, and remained stable in one, for a three-month diffusion index of 78. Additionally, in the past month, the indexes increased in 41 states, decreased in two states, and remained stable in seven, for a one-month diffusion index of 78. For comparison purposes, the Philadelphia Fed has also developed a similar coincident index for the entire United States. The Philadelphia Fed’s U.S. index increased 0.7 percent over the past three months and 0.3 percent in March.
emphasis added
Note: These are coincident indexes constructed from state employment data. An explanation from the Philly Fed:
The coincident indexes combine four state-level indicators to summarize current economic conditions in a single statistic. The four state-level variables in each coincident index are nonfarm payroll employment, average hours worked in manufacturing by production workers, the unemployment rate, and wage and salary disbursements deflated by the consumer price index (U.S. city average). The trend for each state’s index is set to the trend of its gross domestic product (GDP), so long-term growth in the state’s index matches long-term growth in its GDP.
Click on map for larger image.

Here is a map of the three-month change in the Philly Fed state coincident indicators. This map was all red during the worst of the Pandemic and also at the worst of the Great Recession.

The map is almost all positive on a three-month basis.

Source: Philly Fed.

Philly Fed Number of States with Increasing ActivityAnd here is a graph is of the number of states with one month increasing activity according to the Philly Fed. 

This graph includes states with minor increases (the Philly Fed lists as unchanged).

In March, 44 states had increasing activity including minor increases.

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