Paulitical Economy™

Paul Musson

A snapshot of what’s going on in the world’s economy. 

  1. May 25

    Post 368: Energy Shock, Mortgage Shock, and a Stretched Consumer

    The fallout from the Iran war in terms of rising energy prices may just be beginning.US gas prices are up 45% from last year.Canadians renewing their 5-year fixed rate mortgages in 2026 will see the biggest shock yet to their monthly payments.More Americans are moving from California and New York to Texas and Florida.Wendy’s same-store sales have declined in the U.S. for five straight quarters.Its share price is back to where it was in 1993.McDonald’s has had four straight quarters of positive comparable store US sales growth.Although consumer sentiment is worsening and the next quarter will not be as strong.And a look back.Walmart continues to drive impressive same-store sales growth in the U.S. although their most recent print is the lowest in two years.And they too are seeing cracks in consumer sentiment.Lowe’s eeks out a comparable store sales gain.But notes that this is the most difficult housing market since the Great Financial Crisis.Campbell’s Soup has only seen one quarter of adjusted sales growth out of the last ten.It is walking back some price increases on chips and like Pepsi/Frito Lay, they will be surgical about it.Its share price is back to 1994Core inflation in Canada (excluding energy) continues to tick lower.The main risk is that it’s due to a struggling economy.The percentage of Americans making withdrawals from their pension plans for hardship reasons has tripled.In Financial Ructions:The yield curve continues to increasingly uninvert.It’s a bear steepener which doesn’t usually lead to a recession.Although we had a nasty one in the early 1970s.We look at the supply of base money relative to M2.And why inflation soared in the early 2020s.Judy Shelton makes the case for a shrinking Fed balance sheet and lower interest rates.Book ReviewWe complete the last two chapters of the great book False Dawn by George Selgin.Monetary policy was highly accommodative during World War II.But not after the war ended, despite yield curve control still being in effect.We must learn the lessons of the Great Depression and resist resorting to the New Deal playbook.And a shout out to Hayek.

    55 min

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A snapshot of what’s going on in the world’s economy.