Economy Heads South, Gold Heads North

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    by Craig Hemke, Sprott Money:

    The biggest story of 2023 is not a function of IF the Fed will pause and then pivot to rate cuts. Instead, it’s a matter of WHEN will this shift take place. This monetary policy change is coming, and it’s actually much closer than you think.

    And, obviously, this is the key to gold prices as the year progresses. As long as the Fed keeps hiking—and is expected to continue hiking—the COMEX gold price is unlikely to sustain any moves to the upside. However, as history has taught us, once the Fed shifts back to easing, the gold price will rally. The question on your mind should be: when will this shift occur?

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    To that end, some important signals are flashing. Let’s start with a chart I found on Twitter. Below you’ll see the trend of money supply growth in the United States. Money supply growth is important, and it’s necessary, too, as an essential component for servicing the existing debt.

    Note that year-over-year money supply growth has only contracted on a few occasions over the past 150 years. You might further note that each contraction was rapidly followed by some sort of economic calamity. Are the current bank failures just the first coal mine canaries?

    Next, let’s revisit our post from last week. In that article, I tried to demonstrate something that’s very important about the yield curve. Yes, the inversion of the yield curve is a perfect predictor of an upcoming recession, but the inversion itself does not tell you when the recession will begin. For that, we have to wait for the inversion to begin “uninverting” or flattening. As you can see on the chart below, the expected recession begins shortly after the curve begins to uninvert.

    And what has happened in the past week? Driven by the current banking crisis, treasury yields have moved sharply lower but not evenly. Last week, the yield on the U.S. 2-year note hit 5.09%. At the same time, the yield on the U.S. 10-year note was at 4.01%. That made the inversion a whopping 108 basis points and the widest since 1981.

    But that was likely the worst of it. Treasuries have since rallied and yields have fallen sharply, particularly on the short end. On Monday of this week, the yield on the 2-year note was all the way back to 3.98% while the yield on the 10-year note was at 3.46%. If you do the math, that’s an inversion of just 52 basis points or less than half of what it was just one week ago!

    Now look again at that FRED chart posted above. Is the U.S. now on the doorstep of recession if not already immersed in one? This move in the yield curve would certainly seem to suggest it.

    Lastly, let’s discuss the supposedly “robust” U.S. jobs market. It is this alleged job market “strength” that the Fed is using to justify its dreams of an economy that is resilient in the face of their unprecedented rate hikes. However, the Fed’s optimism is misplaced and incorrect, and I think we can connect the data dots to show why.

    At present, the Fed is seemingly enamored with the absolute number of jobs alleged to be created each month and then reported by the BLS. For February, this reported total of “new jobs” was 311,000. However, almost all of the jobs that were added over the past 12 months have been part-time jobs—not the higher-quality, salaried, and full-time jobs you’d expect in a strong economic environment.

    And why would this be? Because corporate layoffs are surging and workers are desperate to take multiple part-time jobs in order to replace their lost income.

    Now here’s the thing that the Fed is missing with their backward-looking data analysis. When you get laid off or “downsized” from your corporate job—the one with health insurance benefits and paid time off—you typically get some sort of severance package. Which is nice. However, in the U.S., a person cannot file for unemployment compensation until that severance package pays out.

    Stated another way, as long as you’re on your severance pay, you can’t file a first-time unemployment claim. So now when we plot the layoff data along with the first-time jobless claims data, we get the chart below:

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