U.S. Inflation Accelerates to 40-Year High
wsj.comAs usual, take headlines about inflation with a grain of salt.
Yes, the year-over-year inflation reached a new peak. But the month-over-month inflation rate has actually been declining since last October: https://www.bls.gov/news.release/cpi.nr0.htm
So when organizations publish a new article every month saying inflation is "accelerating", they're being incredibly misleading.
Not that misleading. If you zoom out 5 years or more, you'll note increased slope of the CPI index over the past couple of years.
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/CPIAUCSL
It's fair to say that inflation has been at an accelerated rate over a time period that makes sense to most folks. Saying that it has decreased month-to-month is more misleading in my opinion. If you were to pick any random period in time, chances are inflation wouldn't be increasing as fast as it has been over those recent "declining" months.
Most of the time, a month-to-month comparison might miss the forest for the trees. Except that in this case, the forest in question has just gone through a pandemic.
To be fair, you ought to select the option to put it on a (natural) log scale. The effect you note is still apparent, but the log scale makes one's tendency to compare it to the 70's more fair.
My math might be wrong, but according your source isn't the annualized month-to-month inflation 7.5%?
(1+0.6/100)^12 = 1.0744.
The year-to-year (multiply all seven rates and then power to 12/7) is 7.1% which is pretty close to 7.5% anyway.
(Also, note that the decrease over the last two months is probably due to the Christmas peak ending. Best case scenario, pie in the sky, for inflation is 3.6% which is higher than my mortgage rate)
If you still have a lot of time left on your mortgage it may be beneficial to refi
I got 2.75 on mine, which is ridiculously low. My parents paid something like 11-12% on their first house.
How much did they pay for that house though?
they paid more than double then what they bought it for. Interest at 11% over 30 years is larger than the principle.
They did not hold the house very long :)
Why not refinance when rates decline?
If they fall within the lifetime of the loan. 11% interest rates werent a one year thing.
That being said, I keep forgetting refinancing is one of the great American blessing we dont enjoy elsewhere. And Ive refinanced twice already :D
exactly!!
i would rather pay less for the house.
You can get cheap houses in the US if you’re willing to live outside select cities. If you’re an IT guy with potentially little impact on your salary.
That being said, we’re in this weird regime where interest rates set the market price of homes (since people can only afford $x/month no matter the interest rate with no wiggle room)
Sorry, I meant higher than my mortgage. Corrected.
I already had a low rate from ‘17 and we refinanced it again.
Thanks for this source, i believe in the last fed meeting JP said he expected us to be on track for 2% this year but i don’t see how that’s possible if we are already at .6 a month in, maybe it will drastically keep going down MoM for this year and average down to 2%?
You want me to take the headlines about inflation with a grain of salt? Fair enough. All headlines should be taken with a grain of salt.
But what do you want me to do about the actual inflation I'm experiencing in day-to-day life, that indicate to me the inflation numbers in the headlines aren't even telling the full story?
This is clearly a result of the monetary base expanding at unprecedented levels due to covid (~40% in 2 years). Around $12 trillion was allocated for covid measures and around $10 trillion disbursed. About half was legislative (income support, state local funding, loans) and another half was Fed mostly benefiting banks (asset purchases and liquidity measures).
So far we've seen crazy asset inflation (weird the market is up 30% from pre-covid levels). But now we're seeing consumer price inflation. I'm afraid it's not like normal times where you can just "slow down" the economy by tweaking interest rates. You will need to do drastic measures to sop up the trillions in newly generated dollars.
We've been pumping money into the economy with no regard to long term inflation since the Obama administration. We've gotten so use to it, we've even started to come up with financial theroies that debt spending a increasing monetary supply doesn't matter - print what you need.
Modern monetary theory ain't. Ask the Romans, the Spanish and the Germans how well that worked for them.
I'm not an expert on MMT, nor a proponent. I don't have a sufficiently informed opinion to say whether it's good or bad.
But, I think what the US government is doing isn't MMT.
MMT proponents seem to be arguing that creating money is good if and only if you ensure it is spent on the right things - like infrastructure. Then you can get net wins for the economy.
According to MMT it's bad if you, for instance, create a situation where institutions, investors, and giant companies have an unlimited supply of dollars that never lose value.
I've read up on MMT because it's politically important. The US govt is doing half of MMT (~0% interest rates), the problem is that the other half is somehow worse.
Reducing aggregate demand via discretionary interest rates to kill the demand from the gray market(i.e. non green-market). A savings account where individuals and businesses are forced to hold cash until inflation goes down. I.e. confiscation by proxy - by the time you're allowed to spend the money it will be worth much less.
> We've been pumping money into the economy with no regard to long term inflation since the Obama administration.
Correct, and _even_ in this context, the printing in the last two years is shocking.
Everyone points to the slow down in the velocity of money as justification, but look at what has happened as long as the fed has been tracking money supply and velocity of money - no matter what time period, once velocity picks back up the fed _never_ decreases the money supply in response. The printer didn’t come with a shredder.
> This is clearly a result of the monetary base expanding at unprecedented levels due to covid (~40% in 2 years).
Or, it's because supply chain disruptions have caused shortages, and there's more demand post-reopening chasing a smaller base of supply.
Japan more than tripled its money supply since 1990 and CPI remained dead-ass flat for thirty years. It's not sufficient to say that an increase in the money supply necessarily leads to an increase in prices. [1, 2]
> So far we've seen crazy asset inflation (weird the market is up 30% from pre-covid levels).
Repeat after me: an increase in the price of assets is not necessarily asset inflation. If each quantity of asset buys you more CPI basket (i.e. returns outpace inflation) then it's an ROI. A real dollar return.
The NASDAQ [5] and S&P 500 [6] P/E ratios are actually roughly in line with historical averages, give or take. Check again. There was a correction recently.
Take Google, for instance. Going into end of 2019, it was trading at $1500/share. Today, $2780. That's 1.85X higher! Crazy right? Well, check their revenues. [3] Just over 1.6X higher (and that's an annual histogram). Google has been trading at the same P/S ratio since 2010, give or take. [4]
Big Tech is reporting some of the best quarterly performance in the history of the world - certainly since the Dutch East India Company, anyways.
Thanks to the COVID response, we very narrowly escaped another lost decade. [7] A few months of inflation means nothing in the long run.
[1] https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/JPNCPIALLMINMEI
[2] https://tradingeconomics.com/japan/money-supply-m2
[3] https://www.statista.com/statistics/266206/googles-annual-gl...
[4] https://ycharts.com/companies/GOOG/ps_ratio
[5] https://www.macrotrends.net/stocks/charts/NDAQ/nasdaq/pe-rat...
> Or, it's because supply chain disruptions have caused shortages, and there's more demand post-reopening chasing a smaller base of supply.
Here's a thought. Supply chain shortages mean people are buying less and obviously some prices are sticky. For instance, I can't buy a new car regardless of price. The price takes a while to adjust wand when "supply chain" clears up, I'll just be able to buy my car at a higher price, further driving inflation. Repeating "supply chain" is not a counter argument.
> Japan more than tripled its money supply since 1990 and CPI remained dead-ass flat for thirty years. It's not sufficient to say that an increase in the money supply necessarily leads to an increase in prices. [1, 2]
While it is true that not every money supply increase has led to inflation, almost all high inflationary periods coincided with the money supply growing.
> The NASDAQ [5] and S&P 500 [6] P/E ratios are actually roughly in line with historical averages, give or take. Check again. There was a correction recently.
I think you need to check again. We're at 26 S&P. Last time it was this high was 2008. Time before then was briefly in 1890s (not a typo)
> Thanks to the COVID response, we very narrowly escaped another lost decade. [7] A few months of inflation means nothing in the long run.
It's not nothing to the pensioners that saw their wealth evaporate 7.5% in one year and likely more to come. Hopefully social security keeps up...
> Here's a thought. Supply chain shortages mean people are buying less and obviously some prices are sticky. For instance, I can't buy a new car regardless of price. The price takes a while to adjust wand when "supply chain" clears up, I'll just be able to buy my car at a higher price, further driving inflation.
I don't expect prices to fall back down meaningfully - especially after a few wage/price cycles. However, I do expect them to stop going up, which is just as good after a few wage/price cycles. There's no reason to think the prices will continue to go up 7% per year.
Especially when in your particular example, between January and February, the price of a new car went up 0%, and a used car went up 1.5%, down from last months 3.3%. [1] Gas prices are down 1% and piped gas down 0.5%. There are signs that things are starting to turn around.
> While it is true that not every money supply increase has led to inflation, almost all high inflationary periods coincided with the money supply growing.
Correlation != causation.
> I think you need to check again. We're at 26 S&P. Last time it was this high was 2008. Time before then was briefly in 1890s (not a typo)
It's currently 25.86. In 2020, it was 25. In 2018, it was 25. In 2009 it hit 123. In 2003, it was 32. In 2002 it was 46. In 2001 it was 27. In 1999 it was 33.
Yeah, it's a little higher than average, but that's likely just due to 0% interest rates and a newfound penchant for margin lending. I don't see that as particularly or inherently unhealthy or at all indicative of "asset inflation."
> It's not nothing to the pensioners that saw their wealth evaporate 7.5% in one year and likely more to come. Hopefully social security keeps up...
Pensioners like basically everyone else aren't invested in dollar bills under their mattresses.
> Correlation != causation.
People misuse correlation/causation expression so much I think its actually detrimental...
If something coincides with something else nearly 100% of the time, I think its safe to say there's some relation between the two. And printing money is always prior to inflation.
> It's currently 25.86. In 2020, it was 25. In 2018, it was 25. In 2009 it hit 123. In 2003, it was 32. In 2002 it was 46. In 2001 it was 27. In 1999 it was 33.
Are you talking about monthly? Maybe... The other thing about those times is we didn't have an unprecedented decline in commercial activity. How could businesses shut down indefinitely and a global pandemic looming over the world and the natural market response be "bullish for business!". Come on...
> Pensioners like basically everyone else aren't invested in dollar bills under their mattresses.
Yes, they're invested in fixed income who yield < 2% and will likely drop a lot in dollar terms once rates ramp up.
> If something coincides with something else nearly 100% of the time, I think its safe to say there's some relation between the two. And printing money is always prior to inflation.
Not really no, which is why we have the whole correlation != causation thing. The number of people who drowned in a swimming pool perfectly correlates with power generated by US nuclear plants over 10 years. [1] There's obviously no causative relationship. The same is true here - you need a model to adequately explain otherwise you're just intuiting, and intuition is frequently wrong.
> Are you talking about monthly? Maybe... The other thing about those times is we didn't have an unprecedented decline in commercial activity. How could businesses shut down indefinitely and a global pandemic looming over the world and the natural market response be "bullish for business!". Come on...
Again, much of the market performance is in big tech which has done extremely well over the last two years. Google is just one example. Look at the top NASDAQ and S&P holdings and you'll see the same thing. The market isn't the economy.
> Yes, they're invested in fixed income who yield < 2% and will likely drop a lot in dollar terms once rates ramp up.
Doesn't when they entered the market, and their allocation, mean a whole lot more?
> Not really no, which is why we have the whole correlation != causation thing. The number of people who drowned in a swimming pool perfectly correlates with power generated by US nuclear plants over 10 years
Not every encounter with a body of water results in drowning. But nearly every drowning involves a body of water. It's not about correlation. It's bayesian probability.
P(drowning|water) >> P(drowning)
P(lung cancer|smoking) >> P(lung cancer)
P(inflation|money printing) >> P(inflation)
Do you get it yet?
> The same is true here - you need a model to adequately explain otherwise you're just intuiting, and intuition is frequently wrong.
Pretty much any econ 101 book. Search basic economics in Amazon for sources
> Do you get it yet?
Every example you listed is an intuitive correlation. You can address the causative relationship between these, but not with the data you provided. All you've done is list a bunch of correlations, and asserted a causative relationship based on shared implicit context. There may be one, but you have not demonstrated it.
Let's work an example without implicit context. I tell you:
P(A|B) >> P(A)
What have you learned about B->A? Literally nothing because the relationship between A and B could be any of:
- A causes B (direct causation);
- B causes A (reverse causation);
- A and B are both caused by C (common causation);
- A causes B and B causes A (bidirectional or cyclic causation);
- There is no connection between A and B; the correlation is a coincidence.
> Pretty much any econ 101 book. Search basic economics in Amazon for sources
Only the Austrian ones, which are long since abandoned.
Yes, clearly, because Covid hasn't disrupted anything else. /s
I suspect that the causes are more complicated.
My belief is that printing trillions of dollars and growing the money supply by 40% in a short period of time has impacted asset prices, and now consumer prices.
If covid impacted other things (i.e. business), why are all asset prices up well above pre-covid levels.
The impact of the money printing outweighs any other covid impacts. Nothing covid related should tell us that Manhattan real estate should be above pre-covid levels w/ work from home, lockdowns and overall decrease in quality of life. It's the money supply
You might be able to escape with saying 2020 COVID was a true disaster.
In 2021, the government (local and federal) used vaccines as a kudgel to create partisan politics around the logistics industry. Ports were shut down (for no reason), and truckers who didn't want to meet vaccine requirements were barred from entry to major ports such as in California.
In 2020 and 2021 helicopter money designed to help people ended up having a second order effect of making people less likely to work. Even if you made the desired "15 dollars an hour" the left asks for as a "fair wage" for burger flipping you still would make more money being on pandemic assistance.
Moreover, California law in particular has strange environmental regulations that further reduced the availability of trucks. Your average truck is worth a small townhome and you can't just sell it and buy a 2012+ model on a whim.
Indeed, the problem like usual is government interventionism through helicopter money and the manipulation of rates to protect the petrodollar in a crisis. It's not complicated, because like usual the finger can be pointed squarely at the fed and congress. We could've been heading back to normal in 2021 with or without vaccine rates being 99.9%. But the nanny state does not believe in personal responsibility (and neither do their constituents) and so here we are. This was compounded by the incessant bleeting of climate pearl clutchers that further reduced the availability of logistical firepower that could've bailed us out.
Armchair financiers on HN are always full of energy. Considering what we were threatened with at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic (total economic meltdown), 7.5% inflation is downright relaxing.
> 7.5% inflation is downright relaxing
COVID didn't cause inflation. Helicopter money did. My liquid net worth almost doubled in the middle of a crisis and my inflation hedge (my house) is worth twice what I bought it for.
The average blue collar person doesn't have the benefits we do and can't play the game. 7.5% "inflation" (if you want to call CPI that) is panic inducing for basically anyone else.
I've taken the amount of cash held in my savings account down to very little and am pushing my usual savings budget into stocks, silver, and crypto. Holding USD seems.... ill-advised.
It would be easier to dismiss online commenters as "armchair" if the experts at the wheel, with all the data, the models, and the PhDs at their command, were making more accurate predictions than them.
The consensus seems to be that “it’s transitory” still. I’ll believe it when I see it
I think that consensus is very fractured, but setting that aside -- has the "it's transitory" consensus made any concrete predictions? Have they been holding up so far?
I just look at housing prices as the input to a low pass filter with a 10-year pole, whose output is shelter costs, and I see the input is up tens of percent and the output is up 4ish percent, and that is enough to tell me we'll have a major inflation driver for ten years. Larry Summers says the same thing, so I'm pretty confident in my own predictions.
We are in a tough spot. The Fed has held interest rates at 0 (negative, real terms) which makes all cash flows effectively infinite net present value. When rates are this low, small perturbations can be catastrophic for the NPV of, well, pretty much everything.
I expect a lot of chaos with the economy whipping between inflation and deflation over the next few years as the Fed tries to ride the tiger.
It's a good reason to never let rates get this low in the first place. From zero, any increase is an infinite increase in interest rates, and a corresponding crater of NPVs.
Welcome to the long run, folks. At least Keynes is dead, so, good for him, I guess.
> a good reason to never let rates get this low in the first place
My brother-in-law remarked that "the fed is overdue to raise rates". My reply: asset prices don't matter to ordinary people.
You already know this, but the Fed's mandate is "price stability and full employment". Full employment is going great -- the job market is tight, low-end labor is seeing lots of wage growth, everyone who wants a job is getting one.
Price stability was also fine until about 6 months ago.
The thing I keep coming back to, is how incredibly little asset prices really matter, in the larger scheme of things. What does matter is things like employment, the price of milk, and whether people have a roof over their heads (rental affordability).
In the larger sense, the fed's hands are tied, unless their legal mandate is amended to include "not creating asset bubbles". The distributive and stability effects of today's monetary policy might be the longest-lasting intellectual shift to come out of all this.
>My reply: asset prices don't matter to ordinary people.
Home values matter enormously to people. So does the value of their 401k, especially those aged 50+
I'm glad I bought my house while rates are very low. While sticker prices are very high right now, the price when factoring in very low interest rates on mortgages are much closer to a historical normal (although still elevated because of the lack of new construction over the last few years). I'm worried for new buyers in the coming years getting stick with these same high sticker prices, AND high interest rates.
But when interest rates go up, the price of homes will drop.
Sal is an average American. Sal can afford $1500/mo for a mortgage, regardless of interest rates.
Today, Sal can get a 3% rate, meaning they can afford a $440k mortgage (with 20% down payment).
If interest rates rise to 6%, Sal can now only afford a $310k mortgage for that same $1500/mo.
If Sal were the only person who had this problem, then Sal would have to settle for a cheaper house than average. But if 90%+ of buyers are in the same situation, then the housing supply will be overpriced compared to what the market is able to pay.
This drives the prices way down, and it would eventually settle to the price that the market can bear, which might be slightly more than the $310k, but probably not too much.
>Sal can afford $1500/mo for a mortgage, regardless of interest rates.
If interest rates are 15% like they were in the early 80s, Sal will be expecting salary increases of >15% a year to keep up, so that $1500/mo won't stay that way for long.
>asset prices don't matter to ordinary people.
Can you provide some data on this assertion? I would be surprised to learn that the majority of ordinary people (assuming you mean something like 'net worth < $1MM USD') do not care about housing costs and car costs, which are both assets.
The median net worth in the United States is approximately zero (assets less student loans, mortgage debt, etc). The median 401k balance in the US is something like 100k. I'm probably right of many people here politically but will readily admit, there's a lot less wealth out there than you'd think, and what there is, is held by a pretty small number of people.
Also, speaking broadly, I don't think the economics profession really understands the connection between house prices and rents. It's a complex topic with a lot of conflicting information. I definitely wouldn't take it as an article of faith that more expensive housing necessarily implies higher rents. There are all kinds of complex subsidies like mortgage interest deductions, factors like credit availability, short-term fluctuations in material and labor prices, etc that make a straight-through 1:1 correlation too clean.
As a general comment, it helps to disaggregate when thinking about huge topics like rental inflation. Rent is growing fast in western/mountain markets (e.g. Idaho) and places like Miami, while hardly budging in places like Cleveland or St. Louis. I'm sorry not to have citations on a lot of this, it mostly comes from firsthand experience and a lot of reading -- I read the economist cover-to-cover every week, manage 12 rental units, and talk to friends and family spread across the US (Seattle, DC, Chicago, Indiana, etc) almost every week.
Where did you get the data on median net worth? I found this, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_wealth_pe..., which states that the median U.S. net worth per adult is 79,274.
Following the references and links I ended up reading this: https://www.federalreserve.gov/publications/files/scf20.pdf, on the top of page 6 there is an interesting tidbit:
> One liability of using the median as a descriptive device is that medians are not additive—that is, the sum of the medians of two items for the same population is not generally equal to the median of the sum (for example, median assets minus median liabilities will generally not equal median net worth). In contrast, means for a common population are additive.
I think that number was across the entire population, so includes children, etc. Probably came from either Piketty's Capital or something else (weekly reader of The Economist plus a lot of econ books)
Still, 79k for adults, inclusive of retirement accounts, home equity, etc. really isn't much.
> My reply: asset prices don't matter to ordinary people.
They do. A large percentage of the population has 401Ks, and many public sector pension plans have equity components. Housing prices are also assets, and inflation in that sector has priced out many people from affording homes, despite low financing costs.
> Full employment is going great -- the job market is tight
We are nowhere close to full employment. We're 3M jobs lower than pre-COVID in the U.S [1], and according to Keynesians, Monetarists, Monetary Keynesians, or whatever hybrid form of wishy washy economics that has used the Phillips curve as policy guidance, this inflation should not happen.
> In the larger sense, the fed's hands are tied, unless their legal mandate is amended to include "not creating asset bubbles"
The Fed's "dual mandate" presumes that (based upon the Phillips curve) there is a sweet spot between full employment and inflation. The correlation is entirely, completely broken [2].
[1] https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/PAYEMS [2] https://www.nber.org/digest/sep19/phillips-curve-still-usefu...
The job market seems to be tight because the folks hiring are unwilling to pay folks to keep up with the inflation we're seeing. It's not worth it for many people in a family to take outside work when childcare costs so much more.
How do you suppose to quantify that? How do you suppose the Fed should quantify that? How do you suppose the parent poster can justifiably say we're at full employment without a hand-wavy appeal to authority?
I won't agree or disagree with your comment, I will just say that the parent poster's comments are all unsupported by data. Clearly, we had a realm only two years ago with (1) millions of people more in the labor market, (2) inflation at 1/4 of what it is now.
We also have been told for two years that inflation like this was impossible, despite editorial after editorial from non-Keynesians saying that we should expect high inflation and supply shocks. This is because supply shocks inevitably happen when capital is mispriced and aggregate demand is forced via government spending. The notoriously smooth supply chains (ha ha) of Soviet command economies was not a historical aberration generated via inflation.
So I won't be listening to the people who have been wrong for two years. Their economic model is wrong, and we can expect their predictions to look like the "Cloud of Points" section of the Phillips curve from the 1970s [1].
[1] https://www.stlouisfed.org/open-vault/2020/january/what-is-p...
> How do you suppose to quantify that? How do you suppose the Fed should quantify that? How do you suppose the parent poster can justifiably say we're at full employment without a hand-wavy appeal to authority?
The FRED numbers saying who is seeking work is the data and far supersedes the source you're not even naming. I'm guessing you're upset because a certain % of the population isn't in the workforce. Well, that's not what full employment is. Random commentors are on the internet don't decide the "full employment" really is. The term full employment applies to those people that are seeking work and can't find it. Unemployment is quite low.
> We also have been told for two years that inflation like this was impossible
"Inflation like this". I'm amazed that we've returned to inflation levels that were the norm for many, many decades during times of relative prosperity, and inflationistas think that they've suddenly been vindicated. No, I'm sorry, 7% isn't the Zimbabwe Republic inflation you've predicted for decades ad nauseum, and no, we've not suddenly adopted a Soviet command economy.
Ultimately I only have anecdotes. But I suppose we could look at the child-care sectors employment growth vs other sectors to see if it's recovering at the same rate as the rest of the economy.
Not very strong evidence but I think it would support the idea that more families are taking care of children in the household economy rather than the cash economy if it is recovering less quickly.
Rents are 18-21% higher now as leases expire.
It's massive, some people more than $100 per month increase.
The waves of homelessness and people living out of their cars starts in a few months.
https://www.apartmentlist.com/research/metro-rent-changes-18...
Can confirm anecdotally. Ending my 2BR apartment lease at 963/month to move into a house in a different location. Currently being re-listed at 1300/month.I was paying 850/month last year.
Last year I looked at renting a similar 2BR apartment in the new place, but prices jumped from 1300/month to 1650/month in like 6 months. So just went ahead and bought a house.
Yes, and there's a massive labor shortage too. Apparently people won't work for starvation wages.
It'll work out in a year or so, or we'll get hit with hyperinflation.
Some places are ahead of the curve. Los Angeles is already not looking good in terms of homelessness.
West coast hasnt looked good in homelessness for decades
> What does matter is ... (rental affordability)
Rental affordability is 100% correlated to asset pricing.
Of course rental affordability is not tied to asset pricing.
Simply put it's tied to opex + cost of capital. And is opportunity costed against other investments -- but keep in mind real estate has high exit costs (realtor). So you'd have to think you can do much better on another investment to sell (and drive the asset price down) for it to make any sense.
The insight is that the cost of capital is roughly fixed at the time of purchase. If someone bought a place in 1970 they can price bid down to nearly nothing because that's their operating cost and the purchase price is only a fraction of landlords who bought recently.
Supply and demand create the conditions where landlords either compete on price, choose to sell, or potentially declare bankruptcy.
This is where you're wrong. It's the other way around.
Asset pricing is what's correlated to rental affordability. If the tenant class, in general, can't afford rent increases, rent won't increase, and real estate asset prices will stop growing, all other things being equal. Obviously, if money becomes cheaper for landlords, then they will borrow more of it to buy the same properties. But this does not give them any more power to unilaterally set rents.
But all in all, the tail does not wag this dog.
Considering your account age and your 14921 karma, the conviction with which you state a complete falsehood, without any hedging, on a topic that is regularly discussed on HN and in broader society doesn’t make me confident in the future of intelligent discussion online…
> Rental affordability is 100% correlated to asset pricing.
It's not, though.
In a very simplified toy model, maybe there should be a direct 1:1 link, but empirically in reality there isn't even close.
To a degree but it has an upper bound of income. Unless people are going to start taking on mortgages to pay their rent.
Rent reveals the true value of an asset. In a typical market asset value should correlate with rents, however in an asset bubble you would expect to see deviation where asset value increases beyond the rental factor.
i don't think the fed's real mandate is price stability and full employment, those are nice to haves and they have to say that so they aren't run out of town on a rail but
their real mandate is: "protect the banks"
at this point, that may be changing to "protect their necks"
rock and hard place, we'll see what happens
> i don't think the fed's real mandate is price stability and full employment, those are nice to haves and they have to say that so they aren't run out of town on a rail but
No that's literally their mandate.
[1] https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/monetary-polic...The Federal Reserve Act mandates that the Federal Reserve conduct monetary policy "so as to promote effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates."Right. I know they have to say that. But I think they are lying.
many such cases
You are both right. The Fed has its public mandates (which it uses the coarse tool of interest rates to manage), but also protects US commercial banks through their refusal to issue narrow bank licenses and their refusal to issue a CBDC or FedAccounts without being shoved by the legislative and executive branches (just like they dragged their feet on FedNow until Congress lit a fire under them because Zelle, owned by the largest banks, was acting anti competitively with smaller community banks).
Lots of Fed criticism to go around for everyone’s enjoyment.
We're not both right when parent is saying the "federal reserve is lying about its mandate" - which makes no sense, not least because the mandate is defined, by Congress, in the Federal Reserve Act. The Fed's job is to execute on it. You can argue about their efficacy or tactics (in spite of their pretty solid ~110 year track record), but that's not the same thing.
It's like saying you think the USPS is lying that they have the mandate to deliver letters.
Getting thoughts to bits can be challenging. As the saying goes:
> Please respond to the strongest plausible interpretation of what someone says, not a weaker one that's easier to criticize. Assume good faith.
The dual mandate is literally described on their website: https://www.chicagofed.org/research/dual-mandate/dual-mandat...
The Queen is literally the ruler of the UK. It says so in the laws.
The GP is saying that the Fed has other objectives than the ones that are formally stated.
Asset prices matter a lot to people that want to buy homes, cars, make investments, etc. unless you are a WEF/great reset acolyte.
Asset prices do matter, but in an inverse way: ordinary people benefit when asset prices go down, especially housing. Of course, the government is doing everything in its power to make sure asset prices stay inflated, which tells you something about whose priorities they take seriously.
> Full employment is going great
Is it? I thought we still have a labor shortage and the unemployment metric is skewed because it doesn't tell the full story of people who just left the labor market.
Tell the hundreds laid off this week at Peloton that asset prices don't matter. This stuff is a lot more interrelated than theorists with simple solutions like to think.
I don't understand the assertion that asset prices don't matter to ordinary people. The price of housing is impactful to everyone, and bubbles in it destructive.
I don't think this can be solved by just tweaking interest rates. The fact is there are a lot more dollars in the field chasing the same number of products. Making it marginally more expensive to borrow money won't sop up enough dollars to prevent price inflation.
Don't you love it how banks are not raising their interest rates on savings accounts? I remember in 2007 I was getting 4% on my savings accounts. There's nowhere to park your money and earn a return even approaching inflation. Why not just front-load your future purchases and further drive inflation?
I don't think the physical amount of dollars matters as much as most people do. Credit spends the same as money, so I view total credit as the real thing to watch.
That's one reason why, given the insane fiscal and monetary policy of the last two decades, we really haven't seen hyperinflation yet (and, in fact, briefly saw deflation.)
It's an unorthodox take, admittedly, but Steve Keen is a good economist to read on the topic.
Total bank credit jumped 5% in about a month when the pandemic started and is continuing to grow at a very high rate historically. This is in addition to personal savings rate jumping from around 7% to over 30%.
There's a lot of money and credit is amplifying it
You can get 8% on stable coin deposits with Gemini Earn and BlockFi. After taxes it’s probably still a slight loss.
> The Fed has held interest rates at 0 (negative, real terms) which makes all cash flows effectively infinite net present value.
No, it doesn't. Net present value (NPV) of future cashflows is defined [1] as the sum over time periods of the ratio of the cashflow in the k-th period to one plus the discount rate raised to the power of k:
where i is the discount rate. Note that we are dividing by (1+i)^k, not by i^k. Thus, when i=0 the formula above simplifies toNPV = sum_k r_k / (1 + i)^k
and NPV is just the sum of all future cashflows. No infinity enters the picture.NPV = sum_k r_kthanks
right, so the net present value of, say, a rental unit (or any ongoing productive investment) is the sum of an infinite number of payments which, if my math is correct here, is infinity (regardless of the recurring payment amount)
of course there is a risk discount as well, which, as I mentioned on a sibling comment, has been removed in many cases by the fed backstopping a lot of investments
there's a reason we don't see actual infinite prices, after all
my general point is that as interest rates get very low, npv gets really whippy and I expect that to be what we see going forward
just a guess and I'm not an economist, although experience suggests that's a point in my favor
No, it still isn't infinite. Under reasonable assumptions the series is actually bounded from above by a geometric series [1] which is famous for having a finite sum when ratio is <1 [2]. In this case, the ratio r=1/(1+i) is indeed <1. More importantly, no asset exists an infinite amount of time, so the sum is actually finite anyway.
Perhaps we should dispose with all the math though as it should be intuitively clear that if we discount future cashflows at zero rate, i.e. if we do not discount future cashflows, then their present value should be equal to the future value. After all, discounting just means that you value future money less than today's money. If you don't discount, you value both the same, so whatever formula for discounting you use it must be true that plugging in zero rate yields NPV equal to the sum of future cashflows.
Agreed about risk discount. Perhaps what you mean by "whippy" is that as the risk-free interest rate goes to zero NPV becomes increasingly sensitive to the risk discount.
[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geometric_series
[2]: See [1]. Also, as an example, recall that 1+1/2+1/4+1/8+...=2.
This isn't right.
The fed basically controls the very short end of the curve. The 30 year rate is above 2 (it briefly touched around 1.3 or something during the start of the covid panic). No one is/was discounting cashflows 10 years into the future at 0 so "all cash flows" didn't have infinite net present value.
Still, 2% over 30 years when inflation is running at 7%+ is negative in real terms. So maybe not infinite, but the key point is that investors are rewarded for holding effectively anything when real rates are negative.
If you are going to use inflation to turn nominal rates into real rates, you also have to adjust (reduce) the cashflows themselves. Ie, you discount real cashflow with real rates or nominal with nominal.
You'll find as you reduce the nominal cashflows by the inflation rate to arrive at real cashflows.... they stop being a cashflow pretty quickly.
I just refinanced a mortgage, and discounted the cashflow on assuming an effective interest rate of -2% to -5%, pre-inflation, assuming the borrowed cash is in a diversified portfolio.
Maybe I'm an idiot, but if so, I'm not alone. Multiple major investment firms are recommending this to their clients.
Anyway, I gotta go count my Krugerrands.
You have to be consistent. You either discount real with real or nominal with nominal. As soon as you are consistent you'll see either the discount rate isn't negative (nominal) or, your cashflow is ~zero (real).
Put aside finance theory for a second - does it make sense that, even in theory, my rental house earning $100 per month more than the cost to upkeep it, is worth infinity? Of course not.
NPV is discounted by a combination of risk-free interest rate and uncertainty. For most investment/capital allocation decisions, the uncertainty term has been dominant for decades already.
yep, obviously
but not much of one when the fed has backstopped everything that matters
another policy error, in my uniformed opinion
Said another way, holding interest rates below inflation devalues assets relative to cash flows. If the gap is relatively small (e.g. 5-15%) then the economy can adapt to lower asset prices relative to cash. Workers get more margin, businesses invest in cash generating activities, speculative bets get hammered, asset returns are low.
If anything I'd say this exercise shows the limits of Federal Reserve power. Without the tight labor market of the pandemic, low interest rates simply raised asset prices. We should take the lesson that the fed should not be solely responsible for driving the economy.
> The Fed has held interest rates at 0 (negative, real terms) which makes all cash flows effectively infinite net present value.
This is only true for cash flows discounted by the risk-free rate. The discount rate of risk assets comes from the risk-free rate with a risk premium added on top (probably 6% or so today for the average blue chip equity).
Yeah, I mean, talk to any stock-picking hedge fund and ask them how much the 10Y treasury yield factors into their discount rate (I'd say not a single one would say it does at all).
Classic HN 'Confidence = knowledge' comment.
i know my gp comment reads w/ a lot of confidence, but I really have no idea what's going to happen
I do believe that even stocks, in the long run, will be discounted against a general opportunity cost and that really low interest rates make small movements really significant in that regard
we'll see
The part you're missing is the 'Equity Risk Premium' which historically has behaved independently of the risk-free rate.
https://learn.robinhood.com/articles/5FDKWbZjnNFHfEPYRNhLtE/...
> I expect a lot of chaos
I am extraordinarily skeptical of essentially the whole comment except this. Economies are very complicated systems composed of many non-rational actors. All economics is voodoo IMHO. It's akin to try to predict the fluctuations in current on a motherboard's bus without having any conception of what program is running. Total guesswork on top of a system more complicated than human understanding.
We want to understand economies in terms of pipes and pressure and the complexity-equivalent of simple machines, when in reality the future is going to be dominated by black swans: crazy things like cryptocurrencies, cyberattacks, once-in-a-millenium climate/weather events, political revolutions, and fads.
Chaos, indeed!
> I am extraordinarily skeptical of essentially the whole comment except this.
You and me both!
Given the current debt, the Fed simply can't raise rates to the degree Paul Volcker did the last time we had inflation like this. So they're going to play around with rates in the low single digits and then go back to zero when the economy starts sputtering.
Wait wait wait.
>I expect a lot of chaos with the economy whipping between inflation and deflation over the next few years as the Fed tries to ride the tiger.
So you expect inflation to remain @ the 2-ish percent target but with extreme volatility?
It's an interesting theory, why do you think that?
Agreed.
We've also seen that interest rate cuts amd QE are very weak at stimulating inflation, and very strong at stimulating asset values.
I'm coming around to the view that UBI should be used to fight deflation, and interest rates to fight inflation.
Volatility adds a real time value of money on top of nominal interest rates.
How does this work? (I thought volatility mainly affected the value of options, not the underlying cash flows?)
Options expire and decrease in value as time passes.
can someone explain this?
A naive NPV calculation discounts a cash flow by a real discount rate:
https://www.investopedia.com/terms/n/npv.asp
when the discount rate is 0, the NPV is simply the sum of all payments in the series, so an infinite series of payments (e.g. rental income) is worth infinity
in reality, bad stuff happens: building burn down, renters leave, etc. so the right thing to do is to discount the payment stream by some risk function, particular far off payments
They will have no option but to raise rate.
I don't think this is meant to be a balance act or achieving that is possible at this point.
There are many competing theories for this inflation:
1. The increase in money supply.
2. Supply chain bottlenecks.
3. Corporate greed & tech monopolies.
4. Fundamental supply constraints. (mostly in the housing sector)
Anybody trying to tell you that it's only or primarily one of them has a political motivation. It's all 4, with the first 2 being primary and both being important.
To effectively solve inflation we need to attack all 4.
I'm sorry, but "corporate greed" doesn't make sense. Were corporations not greedy in 2017?
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/27/business/beef-prices-catt...
"Since the 1980s, the four largest meatpackers have used a wave of mergers to increase their share of the market from 36 percent to 85 percent...Their dominance has allowed them to extinguish competition and dictate prices."
https://twitter.com/AlecMacGillis/status/1476219789899096064
In food supply, I think the issue is regulatory capture. If you make food in the USA you almost have to have a lawyer on staff to navigate all the regulation. Compliance team sizes are growing in ag. The difficulty of starting up a competing meatpacker plant is getting harder every year. When the ability of entry into food production is harder every year, you don't have to compete on efficiency and it trends toward monopoly.
How does a gradual consolidation over 40 years explain a sudden spike in meat prices in the past year? The meat industry was only barely less concentrated in 2017 than 2021.
Not advocating for this point of view, but I think the thinking goes that even if <insert industry of choice here> wasn't any less concentrated in 2017 vs. now, the pandemic provided a lot of opportunity for price increase that might have otherwise caused regulatory scrutiny.
Sure, but they weren't able to execute on that greed to the same extent that they were in 2017. Look at the profits of big tech in 2021 compared to 2017. In a well-functioning free market, most of the surplus is captured by the consumer rather than the producer. So excess profits are a sign of an inefficient market, and thus the drum beat for anti-trust enforcement against Google/Apple/Amazon/Facebook.
Neither Google nor Facebook make any significant profit from selling consumer profits. It's pretty tenuous to claim that their large profits are driving consumer inflation. Amazon makes virtually zero profits in consumer goods. It's high recent profits come from the B2B segments of AWS and advertising. Apple's margins have always been historically high. If anything iPhone concentration in the smartphones has declined since 2017.
The sizable bulk of consumer inflation is being driven by housing, energy, food and used cars. It's extremely tenuous to tie any of this to FAANG profits.
"To effectively solve inflation we need to attack all 4."
Why do you think that? You've listed four conceivable reasons for inflation. One could probably list another 20 after a bit more thought. That doesn't mean that these are all plausible. It seems entirely possible that just one of them accounts for just about all of the inflation. You haven't made any argument against this.
Of the four you list, (3) and (4) seem implausible. Why would corporations suddenly have become more greedy? Have fundamental constraints on the housing sector (you mean zoning restrictions, maybe?) suddenly increased?
> You haven't made any argument against this.
If the problem is supply chain constraints, inflation will be quite varied among the sectors. And this is true, with used cars leading the way at 41%.
If the problem is the money supply, inflation will be fairly even across the sectors. And while the sectoral components are quite different, they are becoming more similar over time.
Those seem like good arguments for both (1) and (2) being factors. Not definitive, though. One expects there to be some variation in price changes from sector to sector at any time, so only a greater than typical variation would be indicative of particular supply disruptions (or put another way, there are always supply chain disruptions, though maybe not of the current magnitude). Also, increased money supply doesn't immediately get distributed throughout the economy. One expects price increases to first show up in the things that tend to be bought by the people who first got the money. And I'm not sure who got the bulk of the recently-created money...
> Of the four you list, (3) and (4) seem implausible. Why would corporations suddenly have become more greedy? Have fundamental constraints on the housing sector (you mean zoning restrictions, maybe?) suddenly increased?
Those are the 4 I've heard politicians and pundits mention. I could name 20 more, but experts aren't naming them.
3&4 are long standing problems, sure. 3 is the anti-big tech anti-trust crowd. Big Tech makes a substantial portion of the profits in America, and that is fairly recent.
Re: 4. Housing costs are a big portion of the inflation index, so tackling that issue will substantially reduce inflation even if it's not a recent problem. It's also the issue that's best addressed by local politicians, in a way that the other 3 can't be.
But arguably one solution - slowing the increase in the money supply - will fix all 4 of them. This isn't like a fire that needs fuel and air to keep going and stopping it can be done by taking either away; One of the two items is technically trivial (raise interest rates) and politically unpopular to do - the other is politically popular and technically challenging (fix supply issues).
If history is any guide we'll try the politically easy one for 10 or 20 years before we finally get around to actually doing what will work.
Raising the interest rates increases the unemployment rate and 9/10 times causes a recession. That's cutting off your nose to support your face.
Absolutely. If the attitude of people were - 7% inflation? No problem, let's just not have an increase in unemployment or a recession then I'd at least be sympathetic.
Instead people say "I can whip inflation without raising rates, increasing unemployment or causing a recession." What do you get? A recession. Rising unemployment. And inflation too.
Does anybody believe that the 7.5% figure is completely accurate and not fudged and massaged to give an answer that won't entirely spook the market?
It feels like their strategy is to avoid making a choice and letting the bubble unwind as slowly as possible to avoid political fallout. Unfortunately, we learned as kids that ripping off a bandaid faster is usually best, so this might prolong pain for a while.
Keep in mind "7.5%" is the aggregate across the entire basket.
This isn't how individual people perceive inflation. What actually happens is that a few things make big jumps (10-15%) and the prices of other things don't increase as quickly.
Maybe not the nicest thing to say, but I'm hardly affected by inflation at all. The four biggest categories to experience inflation recently have been used cars, petroleum, rents, and food. As an urban-dwelling homeowner who doesn't drive much, doesn't rent, and isn't in the market for a car, the only real change has been food, and it's a small enough part of my goods basket that the extra $15-20/week at the grocery store barely registers.
The people really hurting today are the truck-driving renters sucking down 20+ gallons of gas/week driving long distances to their jobs. Those guys are feeling a lot of pain.
i have a variable rate loan on 20 acres that's making me nervous. I'm going to start researching options to rolling that into a fixed rate somehow before the Fed does the inevitable.
It’s too late. Banks have already priced into fixed rates the expectation of rate increases. This is what the newspapers mean when they talk about “market expects 4 rate hikes in 2022” and similar. It is already priced into the yield curve by traders.
IMO, increasing gas prices indirectly affect food prices too... since the cost of transportation is linked to fuel prices.
Inflation statistics have been rigged for decades [1].
[1]: http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate_data/inflation-charts
I can't believe people are still citing shadowstats and expecting to be taken seriously.
It's been known bullshit for a decade and a half.
I bought into the shadowstats guy for a long time, until he admitted he makes up his numbers. It's all bogus.
I wasn’t aware of this. Thank you for letting me know!
Does anyone have a source which is not bogus? Or is the “inflation numbers are rigged” premise just bogus?
This was expected. I wonder though what happens now, is hyperinflation a real possibility. Is it really sensible to expect consistent positive returns from overall stock market this decade unless doing some active investments ?
>This was expected. I wonder though what happens now, is hyperinflation a real possibility. Is it really sensible to expect consistent positive returns from overall stock market this decade unless doing some active investments ?
Hyperinflation is defined as 50% inflation per month.
https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/money-supply-m2
Inflation has roughly 40% locked in; which will push out over a few years. Hyperinflation isn't in the cards.
https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/money-supply-m1
Then you look at M1 and it's like... well could happen but it's not locked in yet.
If you have hyperinflation then your stock market is going to overheat and bust through the top of your chart over and over again! :))
History books focus on the bread lines, but if you dig deep enough you can find the stock market charts and they are epic! The capital class made so much bank and dipped out, just remember to actually leave because the people come for you.
Yeah, it crashes up. Argentina is a good example of this for the their market in 1989-1990.
https://www.ceicdata.com/en/indicator/argentina/equity-marke...
(click max)
yeah, beautiful! have capital! never not have capital!
If it was expected, then the market has already priced it in. The indexes are masking it. A lot of companies under the hood are down 50%
>I wonder though what happens now, is hyperinflation a real possibility
It will happen if the Dollar loses global reserve currency status. China, Russia, and a few allies could pull the rug out from under the US pretty easily. A lot of countries are tired of the US exporting their inflation
Would you mind expanding a little on this for me? I'm curious but don't know much about this topic.
If having reserve currency status gives a country a tool of "exporting inflation" and countries are tired of the US doing it, it seems unlikely those countries would willingly put that tool in the hands of Russia or China, whom they presumably trust much less. (Assuming we're talking about western Europe.)
Devil you know or devil you don't?
On one hand, after decades of inflation being too low, it's nice to see that the spigot works still.
But it's bizarre that interest rates are being held so low. It's unclear who it's supposed to help. I get that we need to boost the Covid economy, but if feels like the economy is currently running at every possible constraint - except for lack of money.
The Treasury pays over $0.5Trillion in interest every year against a total tax base of around $3.75T. Doubling the interest rate would be directly harmful to the government’s financial position. (They could of course “print” more, but at some point that’s adding to the problem more than alleviating it.)
https://www.treasurydirect.gov/govt/reports/ir/ir_expense.ht...
But this is exactly why the Federal Reserve is detached from the rest of the government.
While they might coordinate with the executive branch, ultimately the Federal Reserve is supposed to follow their mandate and leave fiscal policy to Congress.
Yes, but it answers "who does [keeping rates this low] help?" with an answer of "all taxpayers, both now and in the near-future".
I would think that the impact of rising prices would be reflected in reduced profits but it seems like most of the major companies are reporting rather large profits.
Could it be some of the inflation is simply companies taking advantage to raise prices not because they need to but simply because they can?
Yes, that is exactly what they're doing. One example: https://www.wsj.com/articles/inflation-yellen-biden-price-in...
It's exactly as obvious as you think. E.g. Supply and labor input costs go up 5%, and they raise prices 10%. Wherever convenient they will say "We're sorry to raise prices etc." and then during earnings calls the CEO will say "We're expecting upward price adjustments to increase our net margins in Q4". You know, a euphemism for "we're raising prices and that means more profit"
Corporations, especially the the huge conglomerates with adequate pricing power etc. drive inflation, not suffer from it. The elephant in the room today is that the classic economic model that suggests "oh but another company will come with lower prices and re-balance things" is simply unrealistic. Good luck elbowing in on P&G or Unilever for shelf space in supermarkets, commercial contracts, etc..
The other trick everyone is probably about to see is that when the supply chain crisis recedes and inflation comes down, that the consumer prices curiously remain high. Maybe market forces may claw them back over years, but in the meantime it will just be another incremental wealth transfer from mass-market consumers -> concentrated corporate profits.
The corporations will also kick and scream to avoid raising wages for their employees spending more on their own products, while simultaneously giving huge payouts to executives and investors through share buybacks with their newly minted profits.
It's not even interesting to theorize about anymore. It's boring and obvious. Maybe this is what dystopia is?
Absolutely. If cost of goods goes up 7.8%, most companies will round prices up by 10%. Increased costs is a great excuse to not only pass costs on to the consumer, but sneak in some additional "while we're at it" price rises too.
Most goods didn't go up in price in the years before the pandemic despite consistent ~2.5% inflation.
Companies try to raise prices as little as possible, which means accounting for inflation in previous and following years.
Lots of things have been reduced in size / quality which is approximately the same as raising prices.
Who would've thought that printing huge amounts of money causes inflation.
(yes, I know it was not literally printed)
What matters for inflation isn't just money, but the quantity of money and credit (thanks Ray Dalio for explaining this).
The fed correctly predicted in early 2020 that there'd be a massive drop in lending (at least short-term), so eased, hard, so that money+credit would remain relatively constant (much less credit, so much more money was needed). I read last year that something like 26% of then-existing M2 (central bank + bank deposits) was created in 2020/2021. That's insane.
Yet somehow, a year later, after a major pandemic, only a bit of inflation is showing up.
People should give a fed more credit. They managed this thing pretty well. The whole thing feels like trying to adjust the temperature in the shower from 50 feet away with a long stick and a bit of string, and someone yelling "turn it up" or "turn it down". There is so much noise everywhere, it's very difficult.
Can anyone help me understand a seemingly dumb investment choice I made in light of this? I put some money into the Schwabs TIPS ETF (SCHP), back in December. For the most part it's been a minor loser. Even today as the inflation rhetoric picks up the price is down 0.5%. Is it because people bought expecting inflation to be even higher? Or is there some lag or some underlying treasury thing going on.
Nobody will ever make the connection between this, and the lockdowns they imposed on humans. Well, nobody "respectable" so the status followers won't ever hold the opinion where it matters, the court.
"When you are paid not to notice, it is hard to notice" etc.
Supply chain issues is perhaps the most common explanation the experts and laypeople are using for inflation? Aren’t those directly due to lockdowns and restrictions as factories aren’t running full speed.
Inflation is a good thing for people with a lot of debt but not a lot of money. Think of the millions of student debt borrowers. Even if student debt isn't cancelled, it may get effectively cancelled one way or another.
Which just goes to show, if WSJ or Bloomberg say something is bad, it may not actually be bad for you. Let's just hope the pressure stays up so wages keep on increasing.
EDIT:
I'd like to add, wage growth is outpacing inflation[1]. So those middle class family's with mortgages, lower middle class folks still with student debt, poor folks with credit card debt. This is a GOOD THING.
If you want to say wealthy people have more debts, sure in dollar amounts. But I bet dollars to donuts they have way more assets in stock than in their million dollar home mortgages or w/e.
Believe it or not, but wealthy people have more debt relative to income than the poor. For instance, I have a mortgage that is several multiples above my annual income. Most other wealthy people also have debt because it makes sense due to low rates and good credit. The poor often have a tough time getting credit. If you're not making a lot of money it's tough to get debt at multiples of your annual income. That's why payday lenders are so popular (ultra short term high interest rate loans)
It also doesn't help if your income doesn't go up. You end up just paying more for everything. And the poor spend a lot higher percentage of their income on every day purchases that are being impacted.
So on net I think the poor are a lot worse off with high inflation.
It's important to make a distinction here between someone who is wealthy and someone who has high income. I think the people who this applies to are more in the bucket of high earner. E.g. take a typical "high earner" tech worker who brings in $500k p.a. total, but lives in an expensive Californian town. They may have a $2mln mortgage to service and high living expenses. Their debt to income ratio is high, but they can afford it (for a time). At the same time, this person is not wealthy. They need the high cash flow to service their debt load and their net worth may even close to zero (taking the debt into account).
There are many definitions of what is a wealthy person, but in my book it is someone with a net worth >$10mln and a low debt loading. Assuming their holdings are in a well diversified portfolio generating 5% net of inflation, they can likely maintain their lifestyle while their wealth will still continue to grow and they are not at risk of being wiped out by income loss or small drawdowns. E.g. someone who has assets worth $100mln but $90mln debt is very highly leveraged and could quickly find themselves being forced to liquidate assets in case they experience just a 10% drawdown.
A wealthy person will indeed often use debt as a leverage vehicle or simply to make a purchase without having to liquidate their holdings, but the debt will still mostly be a small portion of their assets and often also a relatively small portion of the appreciation of their wealth.
> And the poor spend a lot higher percentage of their income on every day purchases that are being impacted.
The wages of the poor go up with inflation.
> I have a mortgage that is several multiples above my annual income. Most other wealthy people also have debt because it makes sense due to low rates and good credit. The poor often have a tough time getting credit. If you're not making a lot of money it's tough to get debt at multiples of your annual income.
That's why family annihilators are dominated by middle-class dads who lost their jobs and couldn't find another. Middle-class people can accumulate an ungodly amount of debt before the runway runs out.
Income is increasing faster than inflation, so it is helping poor people more than it hurts and easing their debts.
Also, I am not considering upper middle class wealthy. Wealthy is upper 1% who control most of our wealth.
OP didn't necessarily said the poor are better off than the wealthy. The broader point is that if you are in favor of debt forgiveness.. well, this is certainly one way to get it done.
> Inflation is a good thing for people with a lot of debt but not a lot of money.
The counter to this is inflation is painful to people living on savings or fixed incomes. And the politics here are brutal - young people whom this benefits don't vote, older people whom this hurts do.
> The counter to this is inflation is painful to people living on savings or fixed incomes.
The last generation that generally saw the ability to do any of this are the Baby Boomers, and they're a generation that is half-dying and half-broke. Once the Xers with no savings and no pensions start losing the ability to work, the calculus changes. They're 45-60 years old now.
The material view of people who are living on savings and fixed incomes is the people who are wealthy enough not to have to work. That category will soon be dwarfed by the people who need universal health care to stay alive and the people who depend on inadequate social security payments.
Sucks for anyone retired - anyone who has saved over the years - anyone who wants to buy a house, or buy a TV.
And it has a historical track record of getting out of control, and wiping out nation states.
Not arguing that inflation doesn't have it's upsides. But it has some serious serious downsides.
It depends. If you're invested in the stock market, last year was very good for being retired. The S&P 500 was up 27%. (Most retirees will have invested more conservatively, but still.)
It's not good for being retired without having much retirement savings or not investing it, though.
It also works out _sort of_ well for homeowners - at this rate, my house payment is going to end up being a minor inconvenience instead of my largest fixed payment. Of course, I'll still have to pay property taxes and insurance on the newly inflated value of the house.
High interest rates tend to depress borrowers’ ability to borrow (being constrained by DTI ratios), so house values tend to fall from interest rate increases in isolation (though rise with general inflation, so the combined effect is harder to predict).
It’s generally good for mortgage borrowers who don’t intend to sell.
the advantage gets priced into desirable markets. If interest rates go up, house prices go down. Why? because people cannot afford to mortgage as much when they pay more interest per dollar borrowed.
inflation (or the expectation for ones income to keep up with inflation) incentivizes spending more on houses (so long as the mortgage APR is below inflation) because the inflation is eating the debt YoY. So you may as well buy a lot of house.
That is until they raise the rates, or your income doesn't rise, etc.
Then see 2008.
> Of course, I'll still have to pay property taxes and insurance on the newly inflated value of the house
Luckily mortgage payments are the larger than that chunk :D
For now, anyway. My property taxes are currently just over 50% of my mortgage payment, and I expect them to go up 10% (maximum allowed by law) again next year.
About 45% of my housing expenses is expected maintenance, taxes, and HOA dues, all of which I expect to track inflation.
as long as your income rises that will be true
> I'd like to add, wage growth is outpacing inflation[1]. So those middle class family's with mortgages, lower middle class folks still with student debt, poor folks with credit card debt. This is a GOOD THING.
Median real wages have been declining. https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/LES1252881600Q
Anyone with debt gets a win when inflation is high, as it basically shrinks their debt.
Its a good thing in the short term for a specific group of people, but generally not good at all for the macro-economy or society in the long run.
You see the consequences of low interest rates in other ways, ie housing prices.
> Anyone with debt gets a win when inflation is high, as it basically shrinks their debt.
There should be a few caveats - the interest rate has to be fixed (that's not always the case at all) and employment and wages need to go up as well (also not a given).
> Inflation is a good thing for people with a lot of debt
Iff their income increases faster than their interest rate.
> I'd like to add, wage growth is outpacing inflation
Only applicable if it refers to median income (not mean income.)
The problem with the stats is that it could contain some major hidden factors; one is if the median income increased because people with lower income dropped out of the workforce. Another is increased income inequality. It could also be if wage growth was front-loaded with the pandemic and will peter out while inflation will continue unabated. And obviously median is much better than mean for a pareto distribution. Some of this might be easier to spot by looking at the quintiles over time.
People are being successfully brainwashed into believing high inflation will benefit them, either by increased wages or proxy debt forgiveness. It is utter madness.
I suspect the average person is seeing price increases beyond their pay so inflationary policy will become increasingly unpopular.
Mean income is a statistic skewed towards the wealthy, so that just re-enforces the point.
Is student debt with variable interest rates or just a fixed rate?
Because variable interest rates can get quite high due to inflation.
Wealthy people have access to lower interest rates, poorer people have to pay a risk premium. The advantage to the wealthy is exacerbated the closer risk free interest rates go to zero. Lower interest rates is hugely advantageous to the wealthy.
Never mind that when you reach a certain level of wealth, capital is your main source of more wealth. So capital becoming cheaper just goes straight to your bottom line.
I don't support low interest rates as I think it's a bad policy that hurts the low income earners and society at large. However, I did predict and intentionally benefit from low interest rate policies to the point that I can now be considered wealthy. This has led to their rather weird situation where my in online disagreements I'm arguing against my economic interests.
> Inflation is a good thing for people with a lot of debt but not a lot of money.
I think it's good for people that can hop from job to job demanding higher wages as inflation comes. But if you're not in a position to do that, how is inflation good?
interest rates will just rise to cancel the debt canceling effect out.
ultimately it hurts those who don't have a cash buffer for weathering the lag between price increases and wage increases.
> I'd like to add, wage growth is outpacing inflation[1]
This is based on a few months measurement yes? We have no idea what comes next over the coming 2 decades.
sucks for people like me with no debts though.
I was thinking about buying a truck recently and I got this bit of advice: "a loan is a hedge against inflation". More specifically, a fixed interest rate loan is a hedge against inflation.
You are borrowing at an initial dollar value of A (in terms of inflation), and servicing your debt at a fixed rate, for a fixed time. During that time the value of the dollar decreases, and you now have a value of <<<A.
This presumes that your income/cashflow will stay the same or increase slightly during the borrowing period.
I think that's bad advise, or at least incomplete, if the money that was going to buy a car is just sitting in a savings account you're guaranteed to be poorer since inflation will still hit your savings account plus you are paying interest on the loan.
You can get very cheap car loan offers right now which might be interesting. 0 or 0.9% for 3-4 years. Given 3-7% inflation it’s a nice discount if you have the cash to take advantage of better returns
It's only a discount if you get a YoY raise equivalent to inflation. Otherwise you just lose even more money.
And with a 0% loan it us even better
I'm not sure the psychic burden of debt is always worth missing the upside of inflation. I irrationally pay down low-interest loans even though it mathematically makes sense to invest those payments in something higher yielding. However paying off a loan to completion feels fantastic.
Take out some debt. I’m serious. That “free” money is there for you to take risks and invest with.
Hyperinflation begins when everyone decides this is wise and starts taking too many loans.
Until interest rates raise to balance out demand for debt.
invest where though.
In the massive, bubble, err, stock market rally
Oops, if you did that recently, you probably lost a lot of money.
Loan it to someone else at 0% interest.
With no debts and no job, definitely. You're living off savings that are becoming less valuable.
What about all the other things they need to buy with their not a lot of money which have also gone up in price (say food)
It’s a destruction of stored value. It’s never good even if people who took out unwise debts get their asses saved.
And probably soon to 90y high. Most workers getting a significant bump to keep them at work, worldwide logistical mess, one must be naive to think these and everything else won't have further repercutions.
To a 90 year high? I guess you weren't around for the late 1970s. We're a long way from there still.
It's transitory, you right wing nut!!!
Isn’t some of this just a reversal of stuff like oil being negative, and supply chain shocks due to factories shutting down for Covid? Some of it is certainly transitory.
For some definition of transitory, all inflation is transitory. That's a pretty useless definition.
2 full quarters of inflation well beyond target levels (with an accelerating trend) goes beyond a transitory event, in my opinion.
The trend for month-over-month inflation is slowing, not accelerating:
https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/inflation-rate-mo...
It'll be interesting to see how the following dynamics play out over the next few years.
I am under the impression that asset prices will decrease as we enter a cycle of increasing interest rates. Maybe someone can help out, but I can't remember the last time this kind of cycle did not end poorly i.e. a recession of some kind.
The Fed has to regain its credibility and the only way to do that (ex raising taxes, which they can't control) is to fight inflation via raising interest rates.
So can the US Government afford (politically and fiscally) a steep drop in asset prices (stocks, home values) precipitated by rising interest rates, as an entire generation (Baby Boomers) start to liquidate their retirement holdings? A large (+/-30%) drop in equities could take years to recover and would devastate many retirement plans just as people need that money and are forced to make divestments (by law) due to age. I think this is the biggest reason the Feds (both the Government and the Fed) will do everything to keep markets elevated/stable for the foreseeable future (although I haven't put any money on this).
The other thing I wonder about is, how high can rates go before the junk bond and repo markets start to price out companies, and those companies go under due to lack of short term financing.
If any of this is due to a tight labor market, or whatever you call it when it's hard to hire, I wonder if it would be better for society for people to negotiate improvements in how they're treated than improvements in how much they're paid.
Like if everyone negotiates a 20% raise, prices of everything probably increase by 20%, meaning nobody gets shit, and their savings are less valuable. So they come out behind, if anything. But if everyone negotiates a four day work week for the same pay, or better safety standards at work, or shit like that, I'd bet prices don't inflate nearly as much, so they actually could come out ahead.
But that seems like a prisoner's dilemma kind of thing. If only you get the raise, you come out ahead. If everyone gets the raise, you come out neutral.
Cant imagine real estate not taking a hit when yields go up...
Inventory is so low, it's extremely difficult to buy even if you wanted to
Roughly, for every extra percentage of interest, your maximum mortage becomes 15% lower.
inventory is building back up at a rapid pace. I see lots of construction everywhere.
It depends on the area, of course, but most of the construction you're seeing is likely already purchased; developments sell well before the shovel hits the ground these days.
I imagine there is a huge backlog after the lumber price spike in 2020 has trickled back down
Depends on who is already financed. Likely this will be a lagging indicator and we’ll see further increases in institutional investment. Government at all levels will avoid being involved because citizens have grown used to the liquidity of their homes. The long term consequence to the retail market is going to be a tough pill to swallow. Builders adding to inventory are partnering with institutions already. All of this plays out in favor of expanding the SFR market share.
But the demand is still there. And many buyers powered by stock market returns.
Buyers' cost tolerance is driven by the cost of their mortgage, which is extremely sensitive to interest rate hikes, which typically rise as a way to curb inflation.
No cheap mortgages means a lot fewer eligible buyers.
I'm not complaining (I haven't bought a house yet).
All that free money drying up
At this point the only thing the fed manages to do is increase wealth inequality.
The price increases at the grocery store whether it be shrinkflation or price jumps, will never come back down. This is going to squeeze a lot of people.
> will never come back down.
That's how inflation works, effectively the currency (and hence debt) is devalued in real terms.