Muhlenkamp & Company Quarterly Letter – April 2023

Fellow Investors,

Inflation remained high in the United States in the first quarter with the February 2023 Consumer Price Index rising 6%
year over year, down from the recent peak of 9.1% in June 2022. The February 2023 unemployment rate is 3.6%, little changed from February 2022 when it was 3.8%. The Federal Reserve continued its inflation-fighting efforts by raising the Federal Funds target rate to a range of 4.75% - 5.00% at their March meeting, an increase of .25%. The Federal Reserve also continues to shrink its balance sheet with the assets they hold falling to $8.6 trillion on 23 March 2023 from $8.9 trillion a year ago, a decline of 3.3%. Assets dropped as low as $8.3 trillion on 8 March 2023 before increasing by $340 billion over the next two weeks as the Fed initiated a new lending program to support stressed banks (more on that below). The Federal Reserve continues to raise rates and shrink their balance sheet in the belief that
increasing the cost of borrowing and reducing the supply of money in the economy will reduce the demand for goods and labor and thereby bring inflation down. We view this as logical but note that in the 1970s we had both high unemployment and high inflation. Thus, we view it as quite possible that even if the Federal Reserve successfully increases unemployment, the inflation rate may not come down to their long-term target rate of 2%.

The U.S. stock market as represented by the S&P 500 Index has rallied modestly so far this year. The leaders of the rally were the laggards from 2022 and vice versa (which is to say that Tech and Crypto increased the most and energy has done poorly). The rally was marred by the rapid-fire failure of Silvergate Capital Corporation, Signature Bank, and Silicon Valley Bank. These bank failures triggered a selloff centered around regional banks in mid-March as investors became concerned that there may be more problems yet to come in the banking industry. In response to the bank failures the Federal Reserve created a new loan program that allows banks to borrow from the Fed using the par value of high-quality assets as collateral. Usually, such loans are made against the market value of the assets, so this is a meaningful change. It is under this program that the Fed made $340 billion worth of loans in two weeks.