dasari4kntr Posted January 25, 2023 Report Posted January 25, 2023 The Federal Reserve faces a momentous decision in the coming weeks. Markets expect the central bank to increase rates by a quarter of a percentage point, marking a significant slowdown in its history-making pace of hikes. The dial-back, if implemented, will be for good reason—the rate hikes look like they are starting to work. The annual pace of inflation in December cooled for six straight months and looks set to continue to slow. There’s another sign that the Fed’s rate hikes are working: The amount of money in the economy contracted in December. The growth of M2—a measure of money supply in the economy that includes currency in circulation, balances in retail money-market funds, and savings deposits, and more—had been slowing over the past two years after a surge in 2020, but December numbers show a decline. The money supply growth rate for December was a negative 1.3% versus a year ago, the lowest ever and marking the first-ever decline in M2 based on all data available. The Fed started tracking the metric in 1959. November’s growth was already at 0.01%, well below the peak of 27% growth in February 2021. Reversing CourseMoney has never been tighter in the U.S.Source: Federal Reserve Economic Data.Note: Year-over-year change in M2, which Fedstarted tracking in 1959; seasonally adjusted. The fall points to a cooling economy and a strong pass-through of higher rates, one that would seem to feed recent recession fears. A strong economic decline, however, isn’t what the metric is signaling. M2 is still 37% higher than it was before the pandemic despite going through one of its sharpest decelerations. In other words, the amount of liquidity in the system remains high, economists say, a sign that more needs to be done to normalize the economy. “Households are still sitting on much of these [2020] deposits,” says Viral Acharya, former deputy governor of the Reserve Bank of India and current economics professor at NYU Stern, referring to the stimulus checks that led to a surge in bank deposits in 2020. That’s not the only reason M2 spiked—and has been falling rapidly. For that, we can look at the Fed’s balance sheet actions. “Quantitative easing,” or bond buying, by the Fed during the pandemic helped juice the economy and the central bank’s balance sheet, pushing it to nearly $9 trillion. Now, the Fed is trimming its total assets by so-called quantitative tightening, which is reducing liquidity. The Fed’s total assets were down 5.3% on Jan. 18 since last year’s peak, yet the balance sheet remains more than double the $4.1 trillion in February 2020 before the onset of the pandemic. That’s a lot of money, but the Fed doesn’t want to risk upending financial markets by going any faster with the tightening. The Fed “does not want to convert monetary tightening into an episode of financial instability,” said Acharya, who along with three other economists published a paper in August titled Why Shrinking Central Bank Balance Sheets is an Uphill Task. Ultimately, as M2 retreats further it should continue to help cool inflation as the dip in money reserves crimps demand and lowers “capacity to support bank loans and other financing for households, firms, and financial market transactions,” said Nathan Sheets, Citi’s global chief economist. But investors shouldn’t assume that declining M2 will automatically signal an economic slowdown, writes Merion Capital Group’s Richard Farr. M2 “needs to fall by at least another trillion dollars,” to even matter, he said. That’s a long way to go. https://www.barrons.com/articles/m2-money-supply-recession-51674569554?mod=hp_LEAD_1 Quote
dasari4kntr Posted January 25, 2023 Author Report Posted January 25, 2023 9 minutes ago, veerigadu said: Ache din…. lol...ache din emo kaani... sachhe din... la vundi... 1 Quote
csrcsr Posted January 25, 2023 Report Posted January 25, 2023 Tesla car inka taggutaya, illu rates inka taggutaya ani db uth asking 1 Quote
dasari4kntr Posted January 25, 2023 Author Report Posted January 25, 2023 2 minutes ago, csrcsr said: Tesla car inka taggutaya, illu rates inka taggutaya ani db uth asking vaati kante mundu...job market situation is main... Quote
csrcsr Posted January 25, 2023 Report Posted January 25, 2023 Just now, dasari4kntr said: vaati kante mundu...job market situation is main... Over all 10% guranttee bayya from tech companies avg ee year already 6% ayavi inko 5% avutayi emo Quote
pakeer_saab Posted January 25, 2023 Report Posted January 25, 2023 47 minutes ago, dasari4kntr said: lol...ache din emo kaani... sachhe din... la vundi... you mean "true days" ?? Quote
dasari4kntr Posted January 25, 2023 Author Report Posted January 25, 2023 5 minutes ago, pakeer_saab said: you mean "true days" ?? artham kaaledhu... Quote
Gaali_Gottam_Govinda Posted January 25, 2023 Report Posted January 25, 2023 Rate of change..... Lol check the real picture. $15T nundi $22T ki leparu in 2 years and now down by about 0.2-0.4T from peak. US runs literally on debt and cheap money..... 2 years back M2 supply ki velthe US will be in depression. 1 Quote
pakeer_saab Posted January 25, 2023 Report Posted January 25, 2023 13 minutes ago, dasari4kntr said: artham kaaledhu... sacche ante true hindi lo Quote
naughty15 Posted January 25, 2023 Report Posted January 25, 2023 1 hour ago, dasari4kntr said: vaati kante mundu...job market situation is main... job market scary ga vundhi.. Quote
dasari4kntr Posted January 25, 2023 Author Report Posted January 25, 2023 3 minutes ago, naughty15 said: job market scary ga vundhi.. Quote
VictoryTDP Posted January 25, 2023 Report Posted January 25, 2023 24 minutes ago, Gaali_Gottam_Govinda said: Rate of change..... Lol check the real picture. $15T nundi $22T ki leparu in 2 years and now down by about 0.2-0.4T from peak. US runs literally on debt and cheap money..... 2 years back M2 supply ki velthe US will be in depression. So back to 15T range aithe raadhu Quote
pakeer_saab Posted January 25, 2023 Report Posted January 25, 2023 17 minutes ago, VictoryTDP said: So back to 15T range aithe raadhu it was already very high before pandemic, pandemic just postponed it and made it even worse govts have no weapons to save people anymore without causing massive economic crash, controlled recession is what it appears like. fact is recession can never be controlled and no one knows how it all ends up Quote
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