The final estimate of GDP came as a bit of a shock to the know-it-alls on Wall Street, who collectively were looking for somewhere between 2.2% and 2.3% for the final figure. The fact that GDP underperformed (despite metrics that include everything other than drug dealing and prostitution) speaks volumes about the true state of the US economy, and, to a larger extent, that of the world.
Fading the Fed's favored position that the economy is solid, one would be better advised to consult one's stock broker or neighbor for a more accurate read on economic conditions. Savvy investors realize that GDP, as much as its inflated figures and inclusion of government expenditures belie a weakened state, isn't a very good measure of the health of an economy. The figures can be massaged and pushed around to fit any narrative, and usually are. What's happening in reality is that any growth is easily being eaten away by inflation, and any profits are funneled to the top 10% of the income gatherers, leaving the bottom 90% craving more and spending on credit while saving little to nothing.
A panoply of exaggerated expectations and flimsy figures is what the government number crunchers present, and it is so putrid that even their best efforts to make it appear palatable fall short. The United States has a hollowed out economy, devoid of a thriving middle class, replaced, over the past 20 years, with debt-ridden wannabes whose status is ultimately dependent on enormous wads of credit, from mortgages to school loans, to credit cards, to auto loans and leases, it is all a huge fallacy.
That stocks are able to even maintain some semblance of vigor is owed only to stock buybacks and the largesse of the central bank, which has fueled the massive facade with enough hot money and hot air to lift what is a limp and lifeless corpse off the deathbed... for now.
Numbers don't lie, and the best come from the bond pits, which was relatively calm, but still flatter in the middle, with the spread on 5s-10s falling to a mere 11 basis points. The 30-year bond remained steady at 2.97%, while the ten year ticked up one bip, making the 10s-30s spread just 13 basis points, which is not much interest for 20 years of waiting. Bonds continue to tell the real story, and it's not a happy one. Credit is tightening, slowly but certainly, and the Fed is creating a chokepoint for the economy which will lead only in one direction, to recession.
Dow Jones Industrial Average June Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
6/1/18 | 24,635.21 | +219.37 | +219.37 |
6/4/18 | 24,813.69 | +178.48 | +397.85 |
6/5/18 | 24,799.98 | -13.71 | +384.14 |
6/6/18 | 25,146.39 | +346.41 | +730.55 |
6/7/18 | 25,241.41 | +95.02 | +825.57 |
6/8/18 | 25,316.53 | +75.12 | +900.69 |
6/11/18 | 25,322.31 | +5.78 | +906.47 |
6/12/18 | 25,320.73 | -1.58 | +904.89 |
6/13/18 | 25,201.20 | -119.53 | +785.36 |
6/14/18 | 25,175.31 | -25.89 | +759.47 |
6/15/18 | 25,090.48 | -84.83 | +674.64 |
6/18/18 | 24,987.47 | -103.01 | +571.63 |
6/19/18 | 24,700.21 | -287.26 | +284.37 |
6/20/18 | 24,657.80 | -42.41 | +241.96 |
6/21/18 | 24,461.70 | -196.10 | +45.86 |
6/22/18 | 24,580.89 | +119.19 | +165.05 |
6/25/18 | 24,252.80 | -328.09 | -163.04 |
6/26/18 | 24,283.11 | +30.31 | -132.73 |
6/27/18 | 24,117.59 | -165.52 | -298.25 |
6/28/18 | 24,216.05 | +98.46 | -199.79 |
At the Close, Thursday, June 28, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,216.05, +98.46 (+0.41%)
NASDAQ: 7,503.68, +58.60 (+0.79%)
S&P 500: 2,716.31, +16.68 (+0.62%)
NYSE Composite: 12,475.98, +63.91 (+0.51%)