Initial jobless claims continue to remain stubbornly high, as 745,000 initial claims were filed for the week ending 27 February. Last week’s figure saw an upward revision of 6,000 filers, to now stand at 736,000. Since restrictions have been in place, claims have been well above those witnessed during the depths of the GFC, which were around 650,000 for a couple of weeks. We are now at the one year anniversary of lockdowns and this is the type of economic carnage that still exists. For all Americans that continue to claim some form of unemployment insurance, now rests at 18 million. Giving us a de facto unemployment rate of around 12.7 percent. This is double the official rate that stands at 6.3 percent. The official jobs report for February will be released tomorrow morning by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Other items discussed today were the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet and M1 and M2 money stock. All monetary measures are at or near all-time highs. This is expected to remain the trend on a weekly basis as the Fed remains committed to purchasing $120 billion worth of US Treasuries and mortgage-backed-securities on a monthly basis. This alone should elevate their balance sheet to north of $8.5 trillion, which is 10x higher than where it was prior to the GFC! The Kapital News projects that the balance sheet will be closer to, if not above, $10 trillion by the end of the year, as Congress continues to pass large-scale spending measures.
Earlier today the Chairman of the Fed, Jay Powell, made some remarks that apparently spooked the markets and caused a sell-off on the major indexes. The Chairman apparently believes that inflation will run hot for a short period of time, but will only be transitory, and that the Fed is monitoring closely, and has the tools to contain inflation. This led to yields on Treasuries moving higher, which was cause for concern last week and earlier this week, and has been placing downward pressure on global equities. The same upward effect was seen in the dollar index, as it now trades near levels not seen since last Nov/Dec. Commodities, however, is more of a mixed bag for the time being, with oil prices climbing higher, while precious metals continued their downward trend. In short, the markets are broken and heavily manipulated. All that is left are the narratives that central bankers can tell. The major question is, will markets continue to buy it? If yes, then equity and bond prices may continue higher. If no, then this may be the beginning of the end of central bank control over markets. If this is the case, then it could be a scenario of, look out below. Stay diversified, stay vigilant, and stay with The Kapital News. #Economy #Jobs #Inflation #Debt #Spending #Gold #Silver #USA #Liberty #Commodities #EndTheFed #bananarepublic #FireCongress #Markets #Leadership
