Tuesday, August 23, 2022

Blain: Crisis To Deepen

Blain: This Crisis Is Going To Deepen


On the face of it, there isn’t much to smile about this morning…. Any economic snapshot would be bleak indeed.

Citicorp economists predict UK inflation will hit 18.6% in January.

Even as Europe scrambles to build winter reserves, gas prices spiked after Russia announced unscheduled pipeline maintenance – raising fears it won’t be switched back on again. (Imagine building a massive castle to defend Europe, but leaving the water wells in Russia…)

Stocks and Bonds took their first major spanking since mid-July as players panicked about hints of tighter monetary policy to be announced by a hawkish Fed at Jackson Hole later this week. (Which means if Jay Powell gives the merest hint of accommodative policy, there will, no doubt, be a massive relief rally – but let’s see if we make it to Friday first…) Value stocks are an oxymoron.

JP Morgan’s CEO Jamie Dimon has told the bank’s uber-clients there is a greater than 20% chance the US economy is moving into “something worse” than a hard recession – which is a 30% chance. Ouch. He’s thinking about all the obvious easy to spot stuff – interest rates, quantitative tightening, oil, energy, China, Ukraine and War.

What could possibly be worse than a hard recession? I can think of a few things. Ask me again once Liz Truss is in office. I just can’t wait to hear her plans to deal with an uncontrolled chain reaction of rising pay-demands as wage-inflation goes critical, exploding personal and business default rates, surging unemployment and a winter of increasing discontent and power cuts. The likelihood her government will be overwhelmed is high and confidence in her competence is low. She might surprise us – anyone want to take that bet? Thot not.

A chum has already shuttered his manufacturing business – soaring energy costs killed him, but wages, a dearth of available skills, and supply costs meant it just wasn’t worth fighting anymore. Across Europe, businesses – from restaurants to SMEs are simply giving up – beaten down by a howling gale of inflation, energy costs, business bureaucracy and a dearth of anyone prepared to work for peanuts in increasingly marginal looking jobs.


Household incomes are in terminal free fall






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