While it is true that the FED was asleep at the switch and let inflation get out of hand, their panicked rate rising spree in 2022 is not because of inflation. Yes, inflation has already peaked(and no I am not saying it is going back to 2% anytime soon.) The rapid interest rate hikes and QT has helped accelerate the drop in inflation but it would be coming down anyway, because the two year bubble in money creation was slowing so that will eventually show up in the inflation numbers. The big reason for the panic was a combination of factors that would have led to a collapse of the US dollar, if the fed didn’t jack rates up as far and fast as they have. The BRIC new monetary regime brought about by Russia, China et al is one factor. The fact that a number of countries have been dumping their holdings of US treasuries is a second and the need to keep gold prices surpressed is the third. If the FED had not jacked up the rates from basically zero to 4%, with this coming meeting, countries and even US citzens would have not only stopped buying treasuries, they would have dumped them even faster then they have been. If gold wasn’t suppressed it would would have been a clear signal to market participants that the dollar was done and heading sharply lower. Now, the FED can ease back on the hiking and pause(not cut rates.) If 4% holds for a while, the dollar may not keep going up, but it also probably won’t collapse because pensions and other investors will continue to buy & hold treasuries, at least for now. Especially, if the inflation slows to a more tolerable level instead of the close to double digits of the last year and a half or so. So don’t believe for one minute, that this FED, which caused the high inflation by their incompetence and mismanagement, has suddenly become vigilant against their theft, of YOUR purchasing power!                                         PS: I wrote this early Sunday morning with the intention of posting it Monday morning. I now read an article published on Zerohedge at 4PM Sunday with this take by Morgan Stanley, and have copied a few paragraphs related to what I was saying above about inflation having already peaked and why.             (see below)

 

“First, CPI is coming down. Granted, it is one of the most backward-looking data series; it says very little about the future and can be misleading about present conditions. Think back to what CPI was telling us at the end of March 2021. The index sat at 2.6%Y after the government had delivered more than $3 trillion in fiscal stimulus during 1Q21. As a result, the money supply (M2) was growing by 27%Y. Never in the history of these data (70+ years) had M2 grown at even half that rate. Given that inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon, it was crystal clear that 2.6%Y inflation was likely to explode higher. Fast forward to today and CPI stands at 8.2%Y, a 40-year high and marginally below its peak of 9.1%Y in June. However, M2 is now growing at just 2.5%Y and falling fast. Given the leading properties of M2 for inflation, the seeds have been sown for a sharp fall next year. The implied fall in CPI outlined in Exhibit 1 would be highly out of consensus, and while it won’t necessarily play out exactly as in our chart, we believe it’s directionally correct. This has implications for Fed policy and rates. Indeed, part of our call for a rally assumes we are closer to a pause/pivot in the Fed’s tightening campaign, and while we don’t expect to see a dramatic shift at next week’s meeting, the markets have a way of getting in front of Fed shifts. In short, investors may be as offside on inflation today as they were in March 2021, just in the opposite direction. One of the reasons why we did not try to trade the summer rally was that we felt it was much too early to be thinking about a Fed pivot. We turned out to be right as the Fed shift proved to be too far in the future to make the summer rally last. We’re closer today because M2 growth is fast approaching zero and the 3-month-10-year yield curve finally inverted last week, something Chair Powell has noted is important in determining if the Fed has done enough.

Second, while we have been vocal bears on growth all year (calling for fire AND ice), that view is no longer out of consensus. In fact, part of the big sell-off in stocks in September reflected growing concern about 3Q earnings. But, as with 2Q results, earnings have been weak but not bad enough to get the kind of drop in 2023 EPS forecasts necessary for the final leg of this bear market. Instead, we think that management teams have/will remain mostly silent on 2023, which means estimates will stay elevated until it becomes obvious just how negative the operating leverage has become and/or companies are forced to discuss 2023 forecasts during 4Q earnings results in January/February. As an aside, falling inflation is the reason why we think margins will disappoint more than investors have modeled. For most of the year we have had pushback against our lower growth call, with investors arguing that higher inflation leads to higher nominal GDP, even in a recession, so earnings can hold up. We disagree because higher inflation leads to higher operating leverage all else equal and operating leverage cuts both ways. As end-price inflation falls faster than costs, operating leverage turns negative. That’s where we are today with PPI above CPI. That means lower lows for the S&P 500 are still ahead after this rally is over.

Bottom line, inflation has peaked and is likely to fall faster than most expect, based on M2 growth. This could provide some relief to stocks in the short term as rates fall in anticipation of the change. Combining this with the compelling technicals, we think the current rally in the S&P 500 has legs to 4000-4150 before reality sets in on how far 2023 EPS estimates need to come down. We realize that going against one’s core view in the short term can be dangerous (and maybe wrong-headed), but that’s part of our job. It’s like a double-breaking putt in golf – hard to make, but you still gotta try.”