In Lieu of the Bountiful Triple Dip

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office ramped up its estimate for this year’s US budget deficit by 27% to almost $2 trillion, sounding a fresh alarm about an unprecedented trajectory for federal borrowing.

The CBO sees the deficit reaching $1.92 trillion in 2024, up from $1.69 trillion in 2023, according to updated projections released in Washington Tuesday. The new estimate is more than $400 billion larger than what the CBO anticipated in February

~ Bloomberg, June 18, 2024

Reminds me of that fella back home who fell off a ten-story building … as he was falling, people on each floor heard him say: “So far, so good.”

~ Steve McQueen, in The Magnificent Seven

When inflation begins to upend financial markets, as it has over the past few years, it represents a tremendous disruption. A transition from an era of falling inflation rates to one of higher inflation rates set off a chaotic adjustment of prices, valuations, and sentiment that cascades though financial markets and the economy. The full progression of that disruptive pivot takes time to run its course.

We have reviewed how the Great Inflation began in various articles over the past six years, and we have devoted so many pages to this topic because the last time a disruptive inflationary transition took place, Lyndon Johnson was President and McChesney Martin was head of the Federal Reserve. It was 1965, a long time ago. Many of the hard lessons investors learned during that era have largely been forgotten.

By all appearances in early 1965, inflation was nowhere in sight. Over the previous decade, inflation had averaged just 1.8% per year, and interest rates were low and stable. It was an established regime of low and stable inflation which was, on the surface, not unlike the decade prior to 2021.