Month: August 2022
With last week’s second 75 basis-point rate hike, the Federal Reserve now claims it has achieved a “neutral” monetary policy stance. That would mean, in theory, that interest rates are neither stimulating nor restraining the economy.
“Now that we’re at neutral, as the process goes on, at some point, it will be appropriate to slow down,” Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said.
Powell was effectively telling markets he intends to pivot away from inflation fighting.

Yet inflation, even when measured by the Fed’s own preferred gauge, continues to run hot.
The Personal Consumption Expenditures price index came in at 6.8% in Friday’s report from the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
A Fed funds rate that currently stands at just 2.5% doesn’t look “neutral” at all when the official inflation rate is running at 6.8%.
Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers accused Federal Reserve officials of engaging in “wishful thinking” when it comes inflation.
“Jay Powell said things that, to be blunt, were analytically indefensible,” Summers told Bloomberg. “There is no conceivable way that a 2.5% interest rate, in an economy inflating like this, is anywhere near neutral.”
Left unsaid by Summers and Powell is that the slowing economy and highly leveraged financial markets cannot take much more rate hiking without collapsing. That’s why the Fed is signaling it will wind down its tightening campaign – before achieving any kind of victory over inflation.
In the face of four-decade highs in inflation, monetary policy has gone from ultra-accommodative to slightly less accommodative.
It likely will never get to a truly neutral level – at least not for any prolonged period.
The financial system and the U.S. government itself (the world’s biggest debtor) need interest rates to continue to be suppressed. Negative real rates enable borrowers to be bailed out over time by rising inflation and rising nominal asset values.
Over time, negative real rates also put upward pressure on precious metals markets.
Gold and silver prices lost ground when the Fed started talking tough on inflation. But they rebounded last week when central bankers dialed down expectations for future monetary tightening.
The Fed is anything but neutral when it comes to crafting monetary policy. Central bankers inevitably pick winners and losers when they manipulate interest rates and pump liquidity into the financial system.
The winners of Fed policies are typically Wall Street investment bankers and Washington, D.C. politicians. And so are the holders of tangible assets financed with debt.
The losers are: 1) savers and pensioners on a fixed income who don’t receive earnings that keep pace with inflation; and 2) workers whose wages never get them ahead of rising costs of living.
It is possible, however, for individual investors to position themselves on the winning side of Fed policy decisions.
During some economic cycles, it pays to be in stocks. During others, it’s far more profitable to be in assets that benefit from the unintended consequences of the Fed’s inflationary policies.
As the U.S. economy heads into recession, conventional stocks are vulnerable. Meanwhile, demand for safe-haven alternative assets combined with ongoing inflation pressures could provide a big boost to undervalued gold and silver markets.
Please note: the COTs report was published 7/29/2022 for the period ending 7/26/2022. “Managed Money” and “Hedge Funds” are used interchangeably. Gold Current Trends As discussed last month, overall net positioning is the smallest it has been since May 2019. Then, on July 12th, Managed Money went short gold for the first time since April 2019. […]
The post CFTC Report: Are the Shorts About to Get Squeezed? first appeared on SchiffGold.
Gold demand through the first half of 2022 came in at 2,189 tons, up 12% over the first half of last year, according to the World Gold Council Gold Demand Trends Q2 report. The healthy rise in H1 demand came despite a tepid second quarter. On a quarterly basis, gold demand totaled 948 tons, 8% […]
The post Gold Demand Up 12% Through First Half of ’22 Despite Tepid Second Quarter first appeared on SchiffGold.
Congress passed a bill to prop up the US semiconductor industry last week and is now considering a new spending plan dubbed the “Inflation Reduction Act.” On his podcast, Peter Schiff talked about the Democrats’ legislative agenda and concluded that the “Inflation Reduction Act” will do the exact opposite. Last Thursday, the House passed the […]
The post Peter Schiff: The “Inflation Reduction Act” Will Do the Exact Opposite first appeared on SchiffGold.