Economy Slows Sharply, Inflation Heats Up
Friday July 28, 2006 (Jeannine Aversa - AP Economics)
Economy Slows Sharply, Inflation Heats Up in 2nd Quarter, Commerce Department Says
The economy's growth in the second quarter was less than half that of the prior three months as consumers tightened their belts and spending on home building nose-dived. Inflation, however, shot up.
The latest snapshot released by the Commerce Department on Friday showed that that gross domestic product grew at an annual rate of just 2.5 percent in the April-to-June period. That marked a big slowdown from the January-to-March quarter, when the economy zipped along at a 5.6 percent annual rate, the fastest in 2 1/2 years.
Even though the economy cooled in the second quarter, inflation heated up.
An inflation gauge closely watched by the Federal Reserve showed that core prices -- excluding food and energy -- jumped at a 2.9 percent annual rate in the second quarter -- far outside the Fed's comfort zone. That was up from a 2.1 percent growth rate in the first quarter and marked the highest inflation reading since the third quarter of 1994, when core inflation rose at a 3.2 percent pace.
Anti-Spin: Stagflation Godzilla (Part I and Part II) has arrived at Wall Street and boys appear confused by what they're seeing. The DOW is up over 90 points on the "slowing economy and rising inflation" news as of this posting at 11AM EDT. This is not the first report of this kind we've seen. The trend appeared firmly in place in Q4 2005, yet Wall Street appears to be in denial. Had breakfast with a very smart guy from Morgan Stanley earlier this week and they like most firms are discounting stagflation. The reason, in my opinion, is the same reason why VCs discounted the dot com bubble in 1999 and many real estate agents even to this day discount a collapsing housing bubble: what are Wall Street guys going to do for a living in a stagflation?
A stagflation is an environment where inverstors look for the least worst investment to reduce their real (inflation-adjusted) wealth losses, and that's a tough sell. You'll still need Wall Street guys, but not so many of them, just as we'll always need VCs and real estate brokers, but not 1.9 licensed real estate brokers for every citizen in California as we have today.
If the financial services and real estate industries were the answers to the collapsed tech industry in 2000, what's the employment answer to waning real estate, financial services and tech industries? Health care, law and government contracting, is my guess. Health care due to the aging population, law due to the heaps of lawsuits that are about to hit due to fraud during the real estate and hedge fund bubbles, and government contracting to rebuild US infrastructure that deteriorated during the previous six year voter tax bribe era, and make more weapons for the many wars the US will be stuck in for years to come. Unfortunately, these all tend to re-enforce inflation.
Friday July 28, 2006 (Jeannine Aversa - AP Economics)
Economy Slows Sharply, Inflation Heats Up in 2nd Quarter, Commerce Department Says
The economy's growth in the second quarter was less than half that of the prior three months as consumers tightened their belts and spending on home building nose-dived. Inflation, however, shot up.
The latest snapshot released by the Commerce Department on Friday showed that that gross domestic product grew at an annual rate of just 2.5 percent in the April-to-June period. That marked a big slowdown from the January-to-March quarter, when the economy zipped along at a 5.6 percent annual rate, the fastest in 2 1/2 years.
Even though the economy cooled in the second quarter, inflation heated up.
An inflation gauge closely watched by the Federal Reserve showed that core prices -- excluding food and energy -- jumped at a 2.9 percent annual rate in the second quarter -- far outside the Fed's comfort zone. That was up from a 2.1 percent growth rate in the first quarter and marked the highest inflation reading since the third quarter of 1994, when core inflation rose at a 3.2 percent pace.
Anti-Spin: Stagflation Godzilla (Part I and Part II) has arrived at Wall Street and boys appear confused by what they're seeing. The DOW is up over 90 points on the "slowing economy and rising inflation" news as of this posting at 11AM EDT. This is not the first report of this kind we've seen. The trend appeared firmly in place in Q4 2005, yet Wall Street appears to be in denial. Had breakfast with a very smart guy from Morgan Stanley earlier this week and they like most firms are discounting stagflation. The reason, in my opinion, is the same reason why VCs discounted the dot com bubble in 1999 and many real estate agents even to this day discount a collapsing housing bubble: what are Wall Street guys going to do for a living in a stagflation?
A stagflation is an environment where inverstors look for the least worst investment to reduce their real (inflation-adjusted) wealth losses, and that's a tough sell. You'll still need Wall Street guys, but not so many of them, just as we'll always need VCs and real estate brokers, but not 1.9 licensed real estate brokers for every citizen in California as we have today.
If the financial services and real estate industries were the answers to the collapsed tech industry in 2000, what's the employment answer to waning real estate, financial services and tech industries? Health care, law and government contracting, is my guess. Health care due to the aging population, law due to the heaps of lawsuits that are about to hit due to fraud during the real estate and hedge fund bubbles, and government contracting to rebuild US infrastructure that deteriorated during the previous six year voter tax bribe era, and make more weapons for the many wars the US will be stuck in for years to come. Unfortunately, these all tend to re-enforce inflation.
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