"Line go up" is fine when the new money is all concentrated in the imaginary financial sphere and doesn't leak into the real world. Now however they went and created even more new money, and holders of the "imaginary portion" of the money supply want to realize it before it loses value... which is the inflationary disaster they've been pushing ahead and putting off forever with "line go up".
Like living under a big, poorly built dam. You know there's this potential flood on the other side, looming over you. So you pile another foot of dirt on top of the dam and yay! the disater isn't as near. Keep doing this for 15 years and you might forget the reason for the ritual of the dam raising and consider the lake to be proof of your virtue and productivity.
Now the water isn't as wet and we want more, need more; surely we can just carve a few channels in the dam and let some of that water flow, right?
Why is the Fed attacking the stock market? Do they not care about 401ks? What am I missing about stock prices vs bonds except that as interest rates go up people will buy bonds over stocks. But even then stocks are likely a better choice.
The op-ed is by a former regional Fed President who doesn't work or speak for the Fed now. However, his argument is that the wealth effect of high asset prices is a key driver of higher spending and rising consumer prices.
>>The majority of Americans don't even participate in the stock market outside of a 401k at best.
It seems that stock market household participation has inched up over the past 4 decades driven by a variety of factors and is likely a (slight) majority participation rate at this point[1][2] although as one might expect heavily skewed towards higher-income households.
As just one example, a tech employee whose unvested RSUs are sitting at the 2021 highs might be more willing to splash out on all kinds of things -- vacations, restaurants, a nicer fridge, primary or investment residential properties, etc -- than they would if the share price was a lot lower.
Middle America's 401k gets hammered (pushing retirement off x-years) and small set of tech workers can't buy as much? Seems more harmful than good. fwiw, I don't have 401k/and I own a tiny amount of stock.
As rents go up, these rents eat up most of the wages, thereby increasing wages. Increasing wages cause inflation, and it is called "cost-push inflation", as both cost of goods, cost of services include wages.
The uncomfortable answer is (possibly) that a subsection of the elite have all sold mass amounts of stock and bought cryptocurrency...or, at least that's what the optics & legislation seem to indicate.
As the Fed has backstopped every drop since 2009 with seemingly endless liquidity, passive investing has been all the rage over the last decade+. Unfortunately, the party is coming to an end soon, and who knows how history will judge the Fed's experimental QE and ZIRP policies in retrospect. With inflation at 40 year highs, the Fed no longer has the privilege of supporting the passive indexers like it did in the past.
Being worried about very low or even negative real returns over the next 10-15 years (as has happened many times in the past, most recently 2000-2013) led me to start building sophisticated algorithmic trading models that can produce positive absolute returns in any market context in early 2020. While there have been ups and downs, I've turned 525k into 1.4M since deploying live in April 2020. I've recently decided to publish 7 of them at https://grizzlybulls.com, 3 totally free and 4 premium.
Well, HN became big enough that it's worth trying to game it with ads. But HN does a pretty good job of removing (or at least hiding) them by flagging and downvoting, so I'm not sure that it's proof of jumping the shark.
Like living under a big, poorly built dam. You know there's this potential flood on the other side, looming over you. So you pile another foot of dirt on top of the dam and yay! the disater isn't as near. Keep doing this for 15 years and you might forget the reason for the ritual of the dam raising and consider the lake to be proof of your virtue and productivity.
Now the water isn't as wet and we want more, need more; surely we can just carve a few channels in the dam and let some of that water flow, right?