What Did We Learn This Week? (09/29)—Supply constraints are secular
In this week’s article, Tim dives into recent treasury yields. Arguing that while the near term inflation numbers may ease, the long-term effect of supply induced inflation is a secular issue.
What Did We Learn This Week? (09/22)—The New Labor Renaissance
In this week’s article, Tim discusses the changing labor market in the US, the rise of union popularity and whether today’s inflationary pressures are secular or cyclical.
WealthVest: The Weekly Bull and Bear S7E1: Russia Halts the Gas
In this episode Drew and Tim discuss how economists are divided on whether or not we are in a recession, fewer Americans living paycheck to paycheck, corporate profits and Russia turning off the gas.
What Did We Learn This Week? (09/08)—The End of China’s Disinflation
In this week’s article, Tim discusses the implications of the seemingly growing alliance between China and Russia, making the case that there is risk that deglobalization could accelerate as geopolitical tensions rise.
The Seven Drivers of Inflation
In this video, WealthVest's Chief Investment Strategist Tim Pierotti sits down and covers the seven main drivers of inflation in August 2022. Being aware of the main causes behind today's inflation can help guide where we could be going moving forward and what pressures the US Economy could experience in the future.
What Did We Learn This Week? (08/17)—Labor Shortage
Labor Shortage
Wage inflation in the United States has increased dramatically since the US economy emerged from from the depths of the pandemic. Tim explores when will this parabolic wage growth in the United States top out and how fast it decline as the Fed raises rates.
What Did We Learn This Week? (08/11)—Secular vs. Cyclical
Secular vs. Cyclical
On the back of recent CPI data, markets have rallied but Fed comments aren’t quite so bullish. In this article, Tim covers WealthVest’s stance on whether current inflation trends are secular or cyclical and highlights some headlines from top news stories to help illustrate our stance.
What Did We Learn This Week? (08/04)—The Enduring Link Between Demography and Inflation
The Enduring Link Between Demography and Inflation 08/04/2022
To better understand the driving forces behind today’s inflationary pressures Tim dives into an analysis of age structures and their impact on inflation from the Bank of International Settlements. Their analysis looks at 22 advanced economies from 1870 to 2016 and shines a bright light on what inflationary pressures could be facing the US in the coming decades.
What Did We Learn This Week? (07/28)—Tim Pierotti, Chief Investment Strategist
As a Portfolio Manager or Financial Advisor, losing money in a bear market can be painful, but in my experience, not nearly as agonizing as losing money or even just not participating amid market strength. The latter comes with a feeling of embarrassment and a sense that everyone is making money except for your clients. But as a fiduciary, the number one goal always must be to preserve capital. Warren Buffett once said, “The first rule of an investment is don’t lose money and the second rule of an investment is don’t forget the first rule.”
What Did We Learn This Week? (07/21)—Tim Pierotti, Chief Investment Strategist
As anyone who has been a reader of our work knows, we believe that there are several distinct structural forces that will lead to higher long-term inflation. We’ve written about energy underinvestment and declining productivity as contributors to the thesis. This week, we want to throw another factor onto that list and this one is more counter-intuitive than those previously discussed: declining populations. I say counter-intuitive because, like many, I had always looked at the example of Japan as evidence that declining populations would yield declining inflation.
What Did We Learn This Week? (07/14)—Tim Pierotti, Chief Investment Strategist
It’s over. That’s the message from Blackrock’s 2022 Midyear Outlook. The economists and strategists at the world’s largest asset manager with a tidy $10 Trillion of AUM wrote,
What Did We Learn This Week? (07/08)—Tim Pierotti, Chief Investment Strategist
Let’s start with what we already knew coming into this week. We knew that financial conditions have gone from historically easy to historically tight in an incredibly short period of time. We knew the Fed isn’t letting off the gas until clear signs emerge that inflation is under control. Don’t forget, that includes wage inflation. While commodities might be breaking down and that helps, the Fed is a long way from seeing the kind of labor market softening they are going to need to start jawboning to the market that they might be pulling up on rate hikes. As evidenced by the yield curve inversion, fear of an imminent recession has trumped fear of runaway inflation.
What Did We Learn This Week? (6/29)—Tim Pierotti, Chief Investment Strategist
The most important thing I learned this week (besides never grab hold of a skillet on a 500 degree grill) is that the people arguing that Fed will lose their nerve early and Fed Funds wont get over 3% are going to be wrong. I say that even in the context of observing commodity disinflation and continued leading indicator weakness that suggest we are sliding toward recession and curve inversion. Chairman Powell, Cleveland Fed's Mester as well as the Bank of International Settlements, which issued their annual economic report this week, are all singing from the same hymnal.
What Did We Learn This Week?- (06/27/22)—Tim Pierotti, Chief Investment Strategist
The Fed will successfully destroy demand. Gasoline prices may not come down meaningfully anytime soon due to the structural supply issues we discussed last week. Job openings may well stay elevated for months to come and consumer spending will continue to benefit from the dwindling stockpile of savings from fiscal stimulus and the vestiges of QE. But in one very important sector of the economy, the Fed's efforts to cool demand are already playing out. That sector is housing (OER/Shelter) which represents roughly 40% of the data that goes into CPI. To state the obvious, interest rates matter to housing and a doubling of long-term interest rates matters a lot.
What did we learn this week?-Tim Pierotti, Chief Investment Strategist
The Fed will successfully destroy demand. Gasoline prices may not come down meaningfully anytime soon due to the structural supply issues we discussed last week. Job openings may well stay elevated for months to come and consumer spending will continue to benefit from the dwindling stockpile of savings from fiscal stimulus and the vestiges of QE. But in one very important sector of the economy, the Fed's efforts to cool demand are already playing out. That sector is housing (OER/Shelter) which represents roughly 40% of the data that goes into CPI. To state the obvious, interest rates matter to housing and a doubling of long-term interest rates matters a lot.
June Energy Prices Insights—Tim Pierotti, Chief Investment Strategist
This week, we focused on trying to better understand the potential durability of higher energy prices.
As a reminder, at WealthVest, we have a long-term view that potential GDP growth is going lower. That means, we see a real GDP growth rate that will average below 2% and an inflation backdrop that will be consistently problematic, quite unlike the grinding decline of inflation over the last four decades. For what it's worth, this is an increasingly non-controversial view among academic economists, but not one that is yet embraced more broadly on Wall Street.
WealthVest: The Weekly Bull & Bear S6E12: Tim Pierotti Guest
In this episode of WealthVest: The Weekly Bull & Bear, Tim Pierotti comes back as a guest and discusses the GDP contraction, the job market, the Fed, fiscal policy and the prospect of stagflation.
WealthVest: The Weekly Bull & Bear S6E11: Louis G. Navellier, Navellier & Associates
In this episode of the Weekly Bull & Bear, Louis G. Navellier , Chairman and Founder of Navellier & Associates, joined Drew to discuss the global economic recovery, earnings season, the Fed attempt at lowering inflation, I-bonds, stagflation prospects, emerging markets and the Lifetime Income for Employees Act.
WealthVest: The Weekly Bull & Bear S6E10: Potential Russian Default
In this episode, Drew and Grant discuss concerns over inflation, the risk of stagflation, the potential of a Russian default and why U.S. exchanges didn't delist Russia
WealthVest: The Weekly Bull & Bear S6E9: Brainard's Comments
In this episode of WealthVest: The Weekly Bull & Bear, Drew and Grant discuss Lael Brainard's comments, the March job report, how households are adjusting to inflation, American concerns about a recession, the price of diesel, strategic oil reserves and the defense production act being invoked for EV battery materials.