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To: Return to Sender who wrote (90313)6/12/2023 2:28:41 PM
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1 big thing: The U.S. economy just keeps on ticking
axios.com

For 18 months, there has been steadily rising anxiety about the U.S. economy, and for 18 months, it has marched ahead nonetheless.

  • It is the Timex economy. Like the wristwatches in those old commercials, it takes a licking and keeps on ticking.
Why it matters: There is a tendency to seize on each piece of worrying news as marking the end of the pandemic recovery. And of course, this expansion will one day end. But it's worth accounting for the almost stubborn resilience of this economy in the face of problems.

Catch up quick: The S&P 500 peaked Jan. 3, 2022, the first business day of last year. Consider some of the things that have happened since then.

  • The Fed has raised interest rates from near-zero to above 5%, and has shifted from pumping $60 billion a month into the financial system through quantitative easing to sucking up to $95 billion a month out of the system.
  • Mortgage rates have more than doubled, causing a deep freeze in home sales activity last year that's now starting to thaw.
  • Valuations of tech companies plunged, especially those with tenuous finances. Even some of the most successful companies like Amazon, Microsoft and Google announced large-scale layoffs.
  • Three banks with more than $500 billion in combined assets failed, and the government invoked emergency authorities to protect their depositors.
  • There were widespread fears that a debt ceiling standoff could end in a catastrophic default on U.S. Treasury securities — fears that dissipated after the Biden administration and House Republicans struck a deal.
Despite it all, the unemployment rate, even after ticking up to 3.7% in May, was lower than it ever was during the booming expansions of the 1980s, 1990s or mid-2000s.

  • The S&P 500, after falling 25% between January and its October low, has surged about 20%. It's now only 10% below the high.
Between the lines: The financial markets are not the economy. The handful of industries that are the subjects of intense media focus are not the economy. Fed policy is not the economy.

  • The economy is the combined efforts of 161 million workers producing $26 trillion worth of goods and services a year across countless industries, fulfilling demand from 332 million Americans and billions of people around the globe.
The bottom line: The U.S. economy is a powerful machine with a momentum of its own. It may yet falter more meaningfully than it already has as the Fed keeps trying to bring inflation down.

  • But don't assume the sky is falling every time it rains.


2. The view from consumers


Data: New York Federal Reserve; Chart: Axios Visuals
May CPI data out tomorrow is expected to show still sticky underlying inflation, which would pressure the Fed to signal that even if it leaves rates unchanged Wednesday, hikes aren't necessarily done.

Driving the news: Consumers — at least in the near term — continue to believe inflation will recede alongside a resilient labor market, according to the New York Fed's latest survey of consumer expectations, released today.

By the numbers: Over the next year, Americans' median inflation expectations fell to 4.1% — a 0.3 percentage point decline from April and the lowest level since May 2021 (though still quite elevated compared to pre-pandemic times).

  • In the three-year horizon, expectations edged up slightly (by 0.1 percentage point) to 3%.
The intrigue: For the first time in five months, consumers anticipate their pay will rise at a slower pace over the next year. That decline was most pronounced among the least educated workers.

  • But consumers are still confident about the broader state of the labor market; they see very low odds of being laid off over the next 12 months.
  • The mean perceived probability of losing one's job registered the lowest reading since April 2022 — and is only 0.1 percentage point above the all-time low.
Of note: The survey points to some signs of tighter credit conditions. Following the three bank failures earlier this year, a larger share of consumers in May said it is difficult to obtain credit now compared to a year ago. More anticipate tighter credit over the next year.

What's next: Forecasters expect that overall CPI rose 0.2% in May, slowing from the 0.4% monthly pace the prior month.

  • But economists say core CPI, which excludes food and energy costs, is expected to rise by 0.4% — the same pace as the prior two months, as price increases for used cars and rents stay sticky.