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Inflation out of hand? You think? When the Dollar Tree becomes the $1.25 Tree I think we call that 25% inflation. And that's just Biden's first year! I walked out of Home Depot today without my plywood because I wouldn't pay their crazy prices. $38 per sheet of 7/16 particle board! I told them to keep it at the register because the prices were not posted.

Rumors are swirling that the Fed will make an emergency rate hike and this might happen as early as today (Friday). Early Thursday morning the government’s estimate for inflation was released and it was terrible. Inflation is up to a 40 year high at over 7.5%. The rate of inflation was up half a percent higher than expectations. The prices for everything are rising astronomically and Americans are feeling the pressure.

With the punditry obsessing over the March FOMC meeting, where odds earlier today hit 100% of a 50bps rate hike before easing modestly (and more than 6 hikes for all of 2022)…

Why is this notable? Because the February contract expires on Feb 28, more than two weeks before the March 16 FOMC decision. This means that someone is preparing for an intermeeting rate hike, some time before March. And plugging in the numbers, the 13bps in the Feb contract means that there is now a 30% chance of an emergency rate hike.

Impossible? Not according to Fed watcher and SGH Macro strategist Tim Duy who writes that he would “not be surprised by an intermeeting move either tomorrow Friday or by Monday. I know, this is crazy aggressive.”

Aggressive? yes. Crazy? perhaps – after all the Fed is still buying bonds as part of its ongoing QE which is expected to conclude in late February/early March.

In other words, we may soon face the monetary paradox of the Fed hiking rates even as the Fed is still easing monetary policy through QE, and the biggest joke here – the Fed would be tightening conditions to contain inflation that is almost entirely supply-driven and which the Fed has no control over.

Other experts are chiming in. It is very likely rates will be raised very soon because “inflation is getting out of hand”.

https://youtu.be/nWei5T3RxiI

>Inflation out of hand? You think? When the Dollar Tree becomes the $1.25 Tree I think we call that 25% inflation. And that's just Biden's first year! I walked out of Home Depot today without my plywood because I wouldn't pay their crazy prices. $38 per sheet of 7/16 particle board! I told them to keep it at the register because the prices were not posted. Rumors are swirling that the Fed will make an emergency rate hike and this might happen as early as today (Friday). Early Thursday morning the government’s estimate for inflation was released and it was terrible. Inflation is up to a 40 year high at over 7.5%. The rate of inflation was up half a percent higher than expectations. The prices for everything are rising astronomically and Americans are feeling the pressure. With the punditry obsessing over the March FOMC meeting, where odds earlier today hit 100% of a 50bps rate hike before easing modestly (and more than 6 hikes for all of 2022)… Why is this notable? Because the February contract expires on Feb 28, more than two weeks before the March 16 FOMC decision. This means that someone is preparing for an intermeeting rate hike, some time before March. And plugging in the numbers, the 13bps in the Feb contract means that there is now a 30% chance of an emergency rate hike. Impossible? Not according to Fed watcher and SGH Macro strategist Tim Duy who writes that he would “not be surprised by an intermeeting move either tomorrow Friday or by Monday. I know, this is crazy aggressive.” Aggressive? yes. Crazy? perhaps – after all the Fed is still buying bonds as part of its ongoing QE which is expected to conclude in late February/early March. In other words, we may soon face the monetary paradox of the Fed hiking rates even as the Fed is still easing monetary policy through QE, and the biggest joke here – the Fed would be tightening conditions to contain inflation that is almost entirely supply-driven and which the Fed has no control over. Other experts are chiming in. It is very likely rates will be raised very soon because “inflation is getting out of hand”. https://youtu.be/nWei5T3RxiI

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In the 70's they didn't have a money printing problem. They printed $22T in the last 2 years. Raising the rate would put us in default.

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