Category Archives: Business

The stock market is not the economy in an important way

This post was originally published on TKer.co

The U.S. economy is closely related to the U.S. stock market. But that relationship is not perfect in a number of ways.

An important way the two differ is international exposure.

According to FactSet, S&P 500 companies1 generate around 40% of revenue outside of the U.S.2 That means these companies are significantly dependent on the health of the international economies in which they operate. They employ abroad, source goods abroad, and sell abroad.

This is not to say the U.S. economy is totally decoupled from the rest of the world: Annual exports account for $3 trillion of the $25 trillion worth of U.S. GDP.

The S&P 500 is a global story. (Source: FactSet)

But when you think of the U.S. economy, you generally think about activity inside the borders of the U.S. This includes U.S. employment levels, U.S. manufacturing activity, U.S. services sector activity, etc. This, by the way, includes non-U.S. companies with footprints in the U.S. like Toyota, B.P., Samsung, and Nestle.

We’re discussing this now because of news from FedEx FDX -1.25%↓ , a U.S.-based S&P 500 company. From the company’s press release on Thursday (emphasis added):

First quarter results were adversely impacted by global volume softness that accelerated in the final weeks of the quarter. FedEx Express results were particularly impacted by macroeconomic weakness in Asia and service challenges in Europe, leading to a revenue shortfall in this segment of approximately $500 million relative to company forecasts. FedEx Ground revenue was approximately $300 million below company forecasts.

FedEx is one of the so-called “early reporters” — that is, companies whose quarters end a month earlier than most companies. The last two months of FedEx’s quarter overlaps with the first two months of most companies’ Q3. And so the company’s warning may serve as a leading indicator for the upcoming Q3 earnings season, which kicks off in mid-October.

As Asia struggles with COVID-related lockdowns and Europe wrestles with surging energy costs, companies with significant exposures in these regions may underperform those with greater dependence on the U.S., where the economy has been resilient.

There’s also the matter of the surging U.S. dollar, which is leading to the dollar value of revenue generated abroad shrinking for U.S.-based multinational companies. Morgan Stanley analysts recently estimated that every 1% increase in the dollar index represents a roughly 0.5% reduction in S&P 500 earnings per share.

While dollar strength may be good news for U.S. importers and American vacationers traveling abroad, it’s bad news for everyone else watching their own currencies lose purchasing power in the international markets.

All of this raises doubt about analysts’ current forecasts for earnings growth, which appear at risk of getting revised down further. This is a big deal because, as TKer readers know, earnings are the most important driver of stock prices over the long run.

For investors and traders, the key question is what’s priced into the markets. The strong dollar and economic weakness abroad are known stories that have weighed on markets for a while. So, while these are clear headwinds, it’s very possible to see markets climb as analysts factor in the deteriorating macro backdrop into their earnings forecasts.

More from TKer:

Reviewing the macro crosscurrents 🔀

There were a few notable datapoints from last week to consider:

  • 🎈 Inflation is still high. The consumer price index climbed 0.1% month over month in August, unexpectedly accelerating from 0.0% in July. Economists had expected the metric to decline 0.1% amid falling energy prices. While energy prices indeed fell during the period (gasoline prices tumbled 10.6%), prices for food and shelter remained hot, rising 0.8% and 0.7%, respectively. Excluding food and energy prices — which tend to be more volatile in the short run — core CPI growth unexpectedly accelerated to 0.6% in August from 0.3% in July. On a year-over-year basis, CPI was up 8.3% (hotter than expected), and core CPI was up 6.3% (also hotter than expected).

Inflation is still high. (Source: BLS)
  • 📉 Expectations for inflation are coming down. From the University of Michigan’s September Survey of Consumers: “With continued declines in energy prices, the median expected year-ahead inflation rate declined to 4.6%, the lowest reading since last September. At 2.8%, median long run inflation expectations fell below the 2.9-3.1% range for the first time since July 2021.“ The New York Fed’s August Survey of Consumer Expectations released Monday echoed this sentiment. The median expectation for inflation one year ahead was 5.7% in August, down from its June high of 6.8%. From the NY Fed: “Expectations about year-ahead price increases for gas also continued to decline, with households now expecting gas prices to be roughly unchanged a year from now.“

Expectations for inflation have improved. (Source: NY Fed)
Plans for prices are coming down. (Source: NFIB)
  • 💼 The labor market is strong. Even as the economy cools and hiring slows, employers seem to be holding on tight to their employees. Initial claims for unemployment insurance came in at 213,000 for the week ending September 10, down from 218,000 the week prior. While the number is up from its six-decade low of 166,000 in March, it remains near levels seen during periods of economic expansion.

Initial claims have lower. (Source: DOL)
  • 💵 Small businesses are hiring. From Bank of America: “…small businesses continue to see strength in payroll payments. The three-month rolling average of payroll spend per client rose 11% year-over-year (YoY) in August, suggesting robust hiring and wage growth momentum. Restaurant and bar payroll payments may be moderating the most from recent highs, partly reflecting easing wage inflation in leisure & hospitality, but even here 18% YoY growth in August is reassuring.”

  • 🛍 Retail sales are holding up. In August, retail sales unexpectedly climbed by 0.3% month over month. Autos sales climbed 2.8% while gas station sales fell 4.2%. Excluding autos and gas, sales increased by 0.3%, which wasn’t as strong as the 0.5% gain expected. The report reflected strength in “doing stuff” — restaurant and bar sales were up 1.1% — and weakness in “buying stuff” — furniture sales were down 1.3%. Note: Retail sales figures are not adjusted for inflation. Real sales levels are lower.

Manufacturing activity continues to soften in the Mideast. (Source: Philly Fed)

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  • 📉 Stocks tumbled last week with the S&P 500 falling 4.7% to close at 3,873.33. The index is now down 19.2% from its January 3 closing high of 4,796.56 and up 5.6% from its June 16 closing low of 3,666.77.

Putting it all together 🤔

Retail sales and manufacturing activity data confirm that the economy continues to cool. Meanwhile, inventory levels continue to rise, suggesting supply chains constraints continue to ease.

The strong labor market — marked by low layoff activity — continues to put money in consumers’ pockets, preventing the bottom from falling out of consumer spending. Unfortunately, the strong consumer is part of the reason why inflation has been high.

Indeed, while some price indicators have been easing, inflation remains troublingly high. And so financial markets remain volatile as the Fed increasingly tightens financial conditions in its effort to cool prices. As such, recession risks linger and analysts have been trimming their forecasts for earnings. For now, all of this makes for a conundrum for the stock market until we get “compelling evidence” that inflation is indeed under control.

This post was originally published on TKer.co

Sam Ro is the author of TKer.co. Follow him on Twitter at @SamRo

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A man borrowed $75,000 for leg-lengthening surgery to make him 3 inches taller, report says

The LimbplastX Institute charges between $70,000 and $150,000 to make patients as much as six inches taller.Getty Images

  • A man who borrowed $75,000 for surgery faces monthly $1,200 payments for the next five years.

  • John Lovedale told GQ that “the world seems to bend” for taller men.

  • He decided to take out a loan to pay for leg-lengthening surgery to become 3 inches taller.

A man who borrowed $75,000 for leg-lengthening surgery that made him 3 inches taller will spend $1,200 a month on repayments for the next five years, GQ magazine reported.

John Lovedale, in his mid-40s, explained why he went through the painful, months-long surgery. “I noticed that taller people just seem to have it easier. The world seems to bend for them,” he said.

He decided to take the opportunity to become 3 inches taller when he heard about the procedure. Before doing so he was about 5 feet 8.5 inches tall, slightly less than the average height of 5 feet 9 inches.

Lovedale took a loan from the online bank SoFi to pay for the surgery, which costs between $70,000 and $150,000, depending on whether the patient wants to grow by 3, 4, 5, or 6 inches, GQ reported.

The network engineer will now spend $1,200 in repayments for the next five years, but has no regrets, the magazine reported. “People just look at you differently when you’re tall. I already get a lot more looks at the gym,” Lovedale said.

He first heard about the leg-lengthening procedure performed by Kevin Debiparshad on Facebook.

Debiparshad is one of only a handful of surgeons in North America who perform cosmetic leg lengthening. He founded LimbplastX Institute near Las Vegas in 2016, and the clinic’s business boomed during the pandemic, Debiparshad told GQ.

Cosmetic leg lengthening was originally intended to help patients with real conditions, but it is now becoming a more common cosmetic surgery.

The procedure itself sounds excruciating. The doctor breaks the patient’s femurs, or thigh bones, and inserts adjustable metal nails into them. GQ reported that the nails are extended slightly every day for three months with a magnetic remote control.

It can take months to slowly lengthen the bones and for the legs to heal. Debiparshad told GQ: “There’s a mental discipline that you have to have. It’s like training for the marathon.”

The doctor revealed that many of his patients are tech workers from big firms like Google, Amazon, Microsoft, and Meta.

Despite the stigma surrounding cosmetic surgery, it appears to become increasingly common for men. The Washington Post reported in January 2020 that men were turning to all kinds of cosmetic procedures in an effort to get ahead in their careers.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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Bloomberg Analyst Doubles Down on Big $100,000 Bitcoin (BTC) Prediction – Here’s His Timeline

Bloomberg’s lead commodity analyst Mike McGlone is doubling down on his forecast for a six-figure Bitcoin (BTC) price tag.

In a new interview with Kitco News, McGlone says that adoption and demand for Bitcoin appear to be gaining enough steam to push BTC to $100,000 in less than three years.

“Here’s the key thing about Bitcoin. To me, it’s a matter of time before it gets to $100,000. The key fact is by code, the supply is going down. You can’t change it. Adoption and demand are increasing. Unless you expect that to reverse – which I don’t – I think it’s going to accelerate. Every sign I see it’s accelerating. It will continue appreciating. It’s just a matter of time. 

Right now, I think it’s at that point where it’s getting to very low prices. We should look back from the future [at this] as a very low price like we look back at the NASDAQ at the bottom in 2002.”

The analyst says that he expects Bitcoin to benefit from a new chapter of economics whereby speculation is driven by more than just how much money the Federal Reserve is printing.

“Those days are over. It’s back to building solid businesses. No more zombie companies. If you go under, you go under. Bankruptcy can be good, and we get out of this.

So that’s the period I’m looking for. Once we get through this period of just a little bit of cleansing of the excesses of excess, we’re going back to a world where number one, the US is completely dominant. Look at the US, the world’s largest energy producer and net exporter, and the world’s largest agriculture net exporter. How did that happen? By adopting technology.”

At time of writing, Bitcoin is changing hands for $20,082, flat on the day.

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Goldman Sachs cuts 2023 outlook for US growth

Goldman Sachs sees the Federal Reserve acting aggressively to tighten monetary policy through the rest of the year.

That has Goldman cutting its U.S. Gross Domestic Product for 2023 and sees the unemployment rate rising higher than previously expected.

In a note released late Friday, Goldman now sees GDP growth of 1.1% next year, down from its prior call for 1.5% growth from the fourth quarter of 2022 to the end of 2023.

The Federal Reserve has shaken the markets as it implements huge rate hikes in an effort to moderate the steepest inflation in 40 years. 

BIDEN SAYS DEAL AVERTING RAIL WORKER STRIKE AVOIDED ‘REAL ECONOMIC CRISIS’

The logo for Goldman Sachs is seen on the trading floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City. (REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo / Reuters Photos)

The Fed meets again this week and another big interest rate hike is on the table, after the consumer price index report came in hotter than expected.

Goldman now expects a 75 basis point hike, up from 50 basis points previously and sees 50 bp hikes in November and December, with the fed funds rate peaking at 4-4.25% by the end of the year.

The Federal Reserve building in Washington. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File / Associated Press)

VOLATILE MARKETS SENDING INVESTORS RUNNING FOR REFUGE

“This higher rates path combined with recent tightening in financial conditions implies a somewhat worse outlook for growth and employment next year,” Goldman wrote.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ON FOX BUSINESS

Someone completing an unemployment benefits form. (iStock / iStock)

The projection for the unemployment rate is to rise to 3.7% by year-end, up from 3.6%, and rising to 4.1% by the end of 2023, from 3.8% previously.

Reuters contributed to this report.

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Will we go into a recession? FedEx CEO Raj Subramaniam warns slowdown of business is sign of global recession

FedEx warned that a global recession could be coming, as demand for packages around the world tumbles.

Shares of FedEx plunged 21% Friday – the biggest one-day drop in its history – after the company warned late Thursday that a slowing economy will cause it to fall $500 million short of its revenue target.

The weakening global economy, particularly in Asia and Europe, has hurt FedEx’s express delivery business. The company said demand for packages weakened considerably in the final weeks of the quarter, CNN reported.

The video above is ABC7’s 24/7 livestream.

What’s more, FedEx said it expects business conditions to further weaken in the current second quarter, which runs through November. While global revenue this quarter is likely to be flat compared to a year earlier, FedEx’s earnings are expected to plunge more than 40%. Analysts had been forecasting a gain in profit.

During an interview Thursday on CNBC, FedEx CEO Raj Subramaniam was asked if he believes the slowdown in his business is a sign of the start of a global recession.

“I think so,” he responded. “These numbers, they don’t portend very well.”

RELATED: FedEx partners threaten to halt holiday deliveries

He said FedEx is seeing a decline in the volume of freight it is handling in every region around the world. While he said US consumers are somewhat protected by the strength of the dollar, which is increasing their purchasing power, but he said FedEx is seeing a slowdown in Americans’ spending as well.

The warning sparked a broad sell-off in US stocks. Additionally, the Dow Transportation Index fell 5%, while shares of FedEx rival UPS closed about 5% lower.

The 21% single-day loss for FedEx shares easily tops their 16% plunge the day of the 1987 stock market crash, and a 15% drop during the stocks sell-off in March 2020 in the early days of the pandemic. Shares of FedEx are now down 38% so far this year.

The company said it is responding by reducing flights and temporarily parking aircraft, trimming hours for its staff, delaying some hiring plans and closing 90 FedEx Office locations as well as five corporate offices. It is also cutting $500 million from its capital expenditure budget for its fiscal year, which runs through May of 2023, trimming that spending to $6.3 billion.

“We’re going fully into cost-management mode,” he told CNBC.

FedEx said its adjusted earnings for the quarter that ended August 31 will be down $260 million, or 17%, from a year earlier. Revenue rose $1.2 billion, or 5%, despite missing the company’s earlier target.

While it gave the sharply lowered guidance for the current quarter, FedEx said it was withdrawing its full-year guidance issued in June due to the “continued volatile operating environment.

FedEx Ground service, which is the primary way the company handles deliveries of online purchases made by US consumers, missed its sales target by $300 million.

The company uses independent contractors, not employees, to make deliveries, and many of those contractors are complaining that rising costs for fuel, labor and new vehicles has made their business unprofitable. Some are threatening to halt operations on Black Friday, just at the start of the holiday shopping season, unless FedEx agrees to change their compensation.

FedEx insists it will work with contractors who are having problems. It has sued the former contractor who has been the most vocal critic of the company.

ALSO SEE: Does FedEx deliver Sunday? Company wants to trim service in some areas

“We recognize that current economic conditions are posing new challenges,” FedEx Ground said in a statement last month. “We remain committed to working with service provider businesses individually to address the challenges specific to their situation. Our goal is to enable success for both FedEx Ground and service providers.”

About 1,000 of the 6,000 contractors who work for FedEx have joined a trade association to lobby the company for better compensation.

A survey conducted by the association released this week found 54% saying their business with FedEx was losing money, 35% saying it was breaking even, and only 11% saying it was profitable. The association said the survey reached 1,200 contractors working for the company or who left the company within the last 12 months.

(The-CNN-Wire & 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.)



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The CPSC Says Plug To Socket, Not Plug To Plug, Please

When the power goes out, it goes without saying that all the lights and sockets in a house stop working. Savvy rural homeowners stock up with candles, batteries, LED lights, and inverters.  More foolhardy folks simply hook up their home electrical system to a generator using a mains lead with a plug on one end between the generator and a wall socket. This should be so obviously dangerous as to be unnecessary, but it’s become widespread enough that the US Consumer Product Safety Commission has issued a warning about the practice. In particular, they’re concerned that there’s not even a need to wire up a lead, as they’re readily available on Amazon.

The dangers they cite include electrocution, fire hazard from circumventing the house electrical protection measures, and even carbon monoxide poisoning because the leads are so short that the generator has to be next to the socket. Hackaday readers won’t need telling about these hazards, even if in a very few and very special cases we’ve seen people from our community doing it. Perhaps there’s a flaw in the way we wire our homes, and we should provide a means to decouple our low-power circuits when there’s a power cut.

It’s likely that over the coming decades the growth of in-home battery storage units following the likes of the Tesla Powerwall will make our homes more resilient to power cuts, and anyone tempted to use a plug-to-plug lead will instead not notice as their house switches to stored or solar power. Meanwhile, some of us have our own ways of dealing with power outages.

Plug image: Evan-Amos, Public domain.

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Cruel winter ahead for Wall Street as pandemic debts come due

A banker recently told me that CEOs “would have to do something pretty special to fall into bankruptcy” the last couple of years as government pumped massive liquidity into the market, on top of the pandemic handouts.

That’s now changing, possibly quickly, with the Fed raising interest rates and reducing the size of its balance sheet.

A cruel winter is likely for Wall Street as markets remain choppy and their biggest clients scale back. Traditional deal-making such as IPOs has dropped significantly. At every major investment house, management is quietly planning layoffs (and some, like Goldman Sachs, not so quietly).

One area of potential growth: Wall Street restructuring departments. They’re eyeing expansion to provide advice to companies so burdened by high debt load they need to sell stuff or “restructure” in Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

Recession looms

Sources tell me investment banking firm Morgan Stanley is weighing a big expansion of its restructuring team (Morgan Stanley wouldn’t deny the matter). Other banks are likely to follow because none of this is really rocket science.

Morgan Stanley CEO and Chairman James Gorman is reportedly weighing a big expansion of its restructuring team.
AP

If you think the Fed needs to raise rates by a lot (which, given the latest inflation number, it does) the economy will suffer. Recession looms. The likelihood is that some segments of corporate America loaded up on cheap debt and will need help avoiding bankruptcy — or navigating a way out of it. That becomes a big business for Wall Street.

The unwinding of the credit cycle to tighter lending standards is always pretty tough on corporate balance sheets, but it could be particularly brutal this time given the monetary policy experiment — and corporate debt binge — of the past two-plus years, bankers tell me.

Since the pandemic, even the most troubled companies had access to credit. So-called leveraged deal-making exploded. M&A often leaned heavily on borrowing because the Fed provided so much easy money the banks were virtually giving loans away.

What goes up ultimately comes down on Wall Street. The easy money of the early 2000s paved the way for the financial crisis of 2007-2008 with mortgage debt at the center of the deleveraging.

The easy money of the pandemic economy has led to similar risk-taking among companies and investors. An unwind is guaranteed even if it is still unclear if it will reach such cataclysmic levels.

In previous years, the government pumped massive liquidity into the market.
Getty Images

Consider the $1.4 trillion-plus leveraged loan market, which comprises borrowings of the most indebted companies. Such debt has doubled in just seven years. More troubling, the biggest share of the market compromises loans to the riskiest credits. “Junk” credits now make up more than 28% of such loans, according to the data trackers at Morningstar.

You see where I’m going with this: As rates continue to spike, these borrowers will find it more difficult — maybe impossible — to refinance debt. Profit margins (if the companies are profitable) get squeezed as the economy slows. This Gordian knot translates into lower stock prices, layoffs, etc. Companies shed assets, and file for Chapter 11. Bondholders will be owners of chunks of corporate America because they have first lien on deteriorating assets, which means losses for major money managers and pensions.

In the middle of this mess will be the restructuring departments of the big banks dispensing advice and earning fees for their time.

The good news

Some caveats to the doom-and-gloom scenario. Restructurings are beginning to pick up (See Revlon and Bad Bath & Beyond) but they’re not dominating the headlines because default rates remain low. The St. Louis Fed’s index of all commercial bank loan delinquencies are well off the highs reached just after the banking crisis.

But bankers say the trouble looms when loan terms reach their end stages and so-called balloon principal payments come due. Those big numbers begin next year when more than $200 billion in leveraged loans will need refinancing, and will rise yearly by multiples until around $1 trillion is due in 2028, a banker tells me.

That’s a lot of debt to refinance in the face of tighter credit conditions. It’s a recipe for recession, but also for money to be made by Wall Street restructuring shops.

Inflation spiral

As bad as inflation is, there’s a good chance it’s going to get a lot worse. A serious nightmare scenario is starting to circulate among top Wall Street investors.

It began with BlackRock CEO Larry Fink’s grim assessment, explained in this column last week, that the Biden administration stoked significant inflation through reckless spending. It’s now nearly impossible for the Fed to engineer a “soft landing” of the economy with inflation at 8.3%.

Yet it could get worse. Global droughts and the continued war in Ukraine translate into declining crop yields and higher food prices. Gas prices might be coming down, but the administration appears intent on keeping them high by canceling drilling permits. As workers demand higher wages (and railroad workers got one last week by threatening a strike) Fed Chair Jerome Powell cranks up interest rates until the economy lands in a crash.

Dark stuff that some experts dispute, many of the same geniuses who said inflation was “transitory.” 

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Terra Co-Founder Do Kwon: I Am Not ‘On the Run’

Earlier this week, South Korean prosecutors issued an arrest warrant for Do Kwon, the disgraced co-founder of the Terra ecosystem that crashed spectacularly in May; they also asked the finance ministry to void his passport. The authorities looking for Kwon believed he was in Singapore, but on Saturday, Singapore police said Kwon is not there.

Now Do Kwon has chimed in on Twitter.

On Saturday afternoon, Kwon tweeted, “I am not ‘on the run’ or anything similar – for any government agency that has shown interest to communicate, we are in full cooperation and we don’t have anything to hide. We are in the process of defending ourselves in multiple jurisdictions – we have held ourselves to an extremely high bar of integrity, and look forward to clarifying the truth over the next few months.”

Kwon began the same tweet thread by telling Crypto Twitter: “you have no business knowing my gps coordinates.”

Kwon is charged with violating capital markets rules in South Korea, and also faces legal challenges in multiple jurisdictions.

The collapse of the Terra ecosystem (both LUNA and algorithmic stablecoin UST) triggered a massive crypto selloff, sending Bitcoin and other top cryptocurrencies lower. Four months later, the market remains stuck in a chilly crypto winter.

Terra’s collapse also prompted the high-profile meltdowns of crypto lenders Celsius and Voyager, as well as hedge fund Three Arrows Capital, and has brought even more scrutiny on crypto investing and stablecoins from regulators; the SEC is reportedly investigating whether Kwon’s Terraform Labs violated federal investor protection rules with the way it marketed UST.

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Billionaire economist predicts Fed hike in interest rates to 4.5% will crater stocks by a FIFTH 

A billionaire economist has warned that the coming Federal Reserve interest rate hikes will lead to the stock market plummeting by 20 percent.

Ray Dalio, founder of the Bridgewater Associates investment company, joined predictions that the central bank would increase interest rates by another historical 75-percentage points, and that the year would end with interest rates at 4.5 percent.

It would be nearly double from the current range of 2.25 and 2.5 percent, which Dalio wrote would plunge stocks by a fifth as Wall Street’s three major indexes have already seen a more than 9 percent drop this past month. 

Dalio added that the negative forecast would impact all levels of the economy, including American’s 401ks, which will see a significant drop along with the stock market. 

‘This will bring private sector credit growth down, which will bring private sector spending and, hence, the economy down with it,’ he wrote. 

Ray Dalio (above), billionaire founder of the Bridgewater Associates investment company, warned that the predicted federal interest rate hikes would send stocks falling by 20 percent 

Dalio and other economists believe the central bank will hike interest rates by another consecutive 0.75 percent in order to reach a 4.5 percent rate by 2023

The hikes have caused shocks in the stock market, with the Dow Jones Industrial average falling by 9.34 percent this past month alone 

The Federal Reserve has been ramping up interest rates this year after keeping them near zero during the pandemic in order to combat historically high inflation rates. 

In June and July, the central bank raised interest rates up by 0.75 percent, the highest in more than two decades, and many economists predict the Fed will make a third, consecutive 0.75 percent hike in the coming weeks.

Many have predicted that the hikes will tip the economy into a full recession next year, which the country is technically already under after reporting negative GDP growth in the first two quarters of 2022. 

And with a recession, comes a stock market crash that will take a huge hit on retirement accounts. 

Since the latest report at the end of the second fiscal quarter in June, that average 401k balance stood at $103,800, down almost 15 percent from the previous quarter and down 30 percent from 2021. 

And things have only gotten worse on Wall Street amid the interest rate hikes.  

In the last month, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell by more than 3,000 points, or 9.34 percent. 

The S&P 500 also fell by 9.58 percent, of 410 points, in the past month, with the Nasdaq taking the biggest hit and falling by 12.18 percent, or 1,644 points. 

The S&P 500 is heading for its biggest annual loss since the 2008 Great Recession.  

The S&P 500 fell by 9.58 percent this past month and is heading for its biggest annual loss since the 2008 Great Recession

The Nasdaq suffered the biggest losses this month, falling by 12.18 percent 

Wall Street is expected to suffer repeated losses as the nation is threatened by a looming recession. Pictured: traders looking over prices at the New York Stock Exchange on Friday

Despite open fears of a recession, Christopher Waller, governor of the Federal reserve,  backed the central bank in making another 75 basis-point move, during a speech in Austria last week.

‘I support a significant increase at our next meeting on September 20 and 21 to get the policy rate to a setting that is clearly restricting demand,’ Waller said. 

He said that the Fed will continue to take ‘significant steps’ to control policy and added that rate hikes may continue into early 2023. 

Fed Chair Jerome Powell had already kept the option open for the increase, which is supported by many bankers in a desperate attempt to control inflation.

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Indian tycoon Gautam Adani replaces Jeff Bezos as world’s second-richest person

Jeff Bezos has dropped to third place in the race for riches.

The Amazon founder is now the world’s third-richest person, after Indian business tycoon Gautam Adani leapfrogged Bezos in the latest Bloomberg’s Billionaire Index.

Adani has amassed an estimated $146.8 billion fortune that only trails Elon Musk’s $263.9 billion, according to Bloomberg News.

It’s the first time a person from Asia has ranked so highly on the Bloomberg’s list, which has long been dominated by white billionaires.

Bezos trails Adani by just $19 million. Shares of e-commerce goliath Amazon are down 26% this year.

Meanwhile, shares of Adani Enterprises Ltd. have surged the past week, and some of his group of companies climbed more than 1,000% since 2020, according to reports. 

Adani’s rise to No. 2 coincides with a tech selloff that has chopped more than $45 billion from Bezos’s fortune since January. Bezos — once the world’s richest person — also saw his net worth significantly drop after his 2019 divorce from ex-wife MacKenzie Scott, who received 4% of Amazon.

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