438: Long Inflation Cycle Ahead: Here's Why | Patrick Ceresna, MacroVoices
Listen now
Description
Welcome to today’s episode of The Creating Wealth Show where Jason Hartman reminds you that there is an important distinction to make between interest rates, housing affordability and the ability to qualify for a loan based on the usual things, such as credit score and debt-to-income ratio. There's a general overriding concept of credit availability, not directly related to interest rates: this is the willingness of lenders to lend and the ability of borrowers to borrow, measured by the Mortgage Credit Availability Index (MCAI). The credit supply is down, meaning it is now harder to get a mortgage than it used to be. Jason Hartman welcomes Patrick Ceresna, Founder of Big Picture Trading and host of the MacroVoices Podcast to the show to talk about the current macroeconomic picture we are facing today. Patrick explains why our inflation problems are not going away anytime soon. The only mechanism which the central banks have to slow an economy is the cost of credit, reflected in interest rate policy. However, the problem in this cycle is that when the inflation is not driven by massive demand, but rather supply issues, then the ability for monetary policy to actually have an impact diminishes. We are in the midst of a bear market on asset prices which may not have fully reflected into the real estate markets yet, but in terms of stock markets, bond markets, even slowly into commodities and other things, there has been a deflationary cycle in assets, while there's huge economic inflation because the central banks have begun a very important process of trying to attack inflation by slowing the economy. The only mechanism which the central banks have to slow an economy is the cost of credit, reflected in interest rate policy. However, the problem in this cycle, and why you have the debate of inflation, stagflation, or deflation is that when the inflation is not driven by massive demand, but rather supply issues, then the ability for monetary policy to actually have an impact diminishes. We’ve created all sorts of supply shocks that add further stress points that create additional cost delays and shipping and all sorts of other issues that are not going away. And it's not going to be solved by the Fed increasing another 75 basis points next month. This is a problem where inflation has to be solved by a bigger cycle playing out. And that, unfortunately, is not one that ends in three months. It's a problem that resolves over a couple years. Inflation is an issue that's not going away anytime soon. Key Takeaways: 0:28 Welcome Empowered Investors from 189 countries world wide 1:07 Mortgage Credit Availability Index (MCAI) 2:21 The Great Recession, the mortgage meltdown and The Big Short 4:22 Credit supply in a credit based economy 5:54 Empowered Investor Pro - EmpoweredInvestor.com 8:08 Wall Street is the modern version of organized crime 9:18 Regulating the food supply 10:42 Messaging apps and insider trading 13:51 Last week, the Euro reached parity with the dollar 17:14 Downward pressure on the inflationary spiral 18:21 Why Dave Ramsey is wrong 20:46 Today’s guest PATRICK CERESNA, Founder of Big Picture Trading 21:34 Patrick’s current macroeconomic picture 23:41 Energy shortage - oil vs green 27:11 CPI inflation numbers could come down, but it’s no merit of the Fed 28:49 The 70s had three waves of inflation 30:38 The global pandemic was a unique event 33:24 What investments do you own in an environment like this? 37:35 Could derivatives crash the global economy? 40:41 There a global system risk, not just American 43:09 We are in a fourth turning and there will be some major financial institution reset eventually 45:20 The destruction of purchasing value is the driver of a monetary driven inflation 46:46 The US dollar rising right now is going to keep inflation in check 49:10 At the end of every bear market is a once a decade opportunity to buy a lot of cheap stuff 50:56 A good investor or t
More Episodes
Megan Gorman, author of "All the President's Money," explores the financial habits of US presidents throughout history. Gorman, a financial advisor, tax attorney, and wealth manager, discusses the presidents' varying approaches to money management, from frugal to extravagant. She also explores...
Published 09/24/24
Jason and Robert Helms discuss the recent increase in mortgage refinancing activity and the ongoing housing shortage, its impact on the real estate market, and potential solutions for affordable housing. They also explore emerging real estate opportunities, such as investing in high-demand,...
Published 08/24/24
Real estate investor Trey Taylor advocates for single-family homes as a stable, long-term investment. He emphasizes financial prudence, focusing on properties generating rental income that exceeds expenses. While acknowledging economic challenges like rising interest rates, Taylor remains...
Published 08/10/24