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Bullboard - Stock Discussion Forum Viemed Healthcare Inc VMD

Viemed Healthcare, Inc. through its subsidiaries, is a provider of home medical equipment (HME) and post-acute respiratory healthcare services in the United States. The Company’s service offerings are focused on effective in-home treatment with clinical practitioners providing therapy and counselling to patients in their homes using cutting edge technologies. The Company’s products and services... see more

NDAQ:VMD - Post Discussion

Viemed Healthcare Inc > Globe and Mail Article- Interest rates and inflation...
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Post by besttobe on Aug 26, 2022 4:31pm

Globe and Mail Article- Interest rates and inflation...

VMD needs to raise prices but can't, because they are regulated....

U.S. Federal Reserve Board Chair Jerome Powell speaks during a committee hearing on Capitol Hill, in Washington, on Jan. 11.POOL NEW/REUTERS

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Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell delivered a stark message Friday: The Fed is determined to fight inflation with more sharp interest rate hikes, which will likely cause pain for Americans in the form of a weaker economy and job losses.

“These are the unfortunate costs of reducing inflation,” Powell said in a high-profile speech at the Fed’s annual economic symposium in Jackson Hole. “But a failure to restore price stability would mean far greater pain.”

Investors had been hoping for a signal from Powell that the Fed might soon moderate its rate increases later this year if inflation were to show further signs of easing. But the Fed chair indicated that that time may not be near.

Runaway price increases have soured most Americans on the economy, even as the unemployment rate has fallen to a half-century low of 3.5 per cent. It has also created political risks for President Joe Biden and congressional Democrats in this fall’s elections, with Republicans denouncing Biden’s $1.9-trillion financial support package, approved last year, as having fuelled inflation.

Stocks tumbled after Powell’s remarks, and bond yields rose, a sign that investors foresee more large interest rate hikes ahead. Some on Wall Street expect the economy to fall into recession later this year or early next year, after which they expect the Fed to reverse itself and reduce rates.

A number of Fed officials, though, have pushed back against that notion. Powell’s remarks suggested that the Fed is aiming to raise its benchmark rate – to about 3.75 per cent to 4 per cent by next year – yet not so high as to tank the economy, in hopes of slowing growth long enough to conquer high inflation.

“The idea they are trying to hammer into the market’s head is that their approach makes a rapid pivot to (rate cuts) unlikely,” said Eric Winograd, an economist at asset manager AllianceBernstein. “They are going to stay tight even when it hurts.”

After raising its key short-term rate by a steep three-quarters of a point at each of its past two meetings – part of the Fed’s fastest series of hikes since the early 1980s – Powell said the Fed might ease up on that pace “at some point” – suggesting that any such slowing isn’t near.

Powell said the size of the Fed’s rate increase at its next meeting in late September – whether one-half or three-quarters of a percentage point – will depend on inflation and jobs data. An increase of either size, though, would exceed the Fed’s traditional quarter-point hike, a reflection of how severe inflation has become.

The Fed chair said that while lower inflation readings that have been reported for July have been “welcome,” he added that, “a single month’s improvement falls far short of what (Fed policy-makers) will need to see before we are confident that inflation is moving down.”

 

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On Friday, an inflation gauge that is closely monitored by the Fed showed that prices actually declined 0.1 per cent from June to July. Though prices did jump 6.3 per cent in July from 12 months earlier, that was down from a 6.8 per cent year-over-year jump in June, which had been the highest since 1982. The drop largely reflected lower gas prices.

In his speech Friday, Powell noted that the history of high inflation in the 1970s, when the central bank sought to counter high prices with only intermittent rate hikes, shows that the Fed must stay focused.

“The historical record cautions strongly against prematurely” lowering interest rates, he said. “We must keep at it until the job is done.”

What particularly worries Powell and other Fed officials is the prospect that inflation would become entrenched, leading consumers and businesses to change their behaviour in ways that would perpetuate higher prices. If, for example, workers began demanding higher pay to match higher inflation, many employers would then pass on those higher labour costs to consumers in the form of higher prices.

Many analysts speculate that Fed officials want to see roughly six months or so of lower monthly inflation readings, similar to July’s, before stopping their rate hikes.

Powell’s speech was the marquee event of the Fed’s annual economic symposium at Jackson Hole, the first time the conference of central bankers is being held in person since 2019, after it went virtual for two years during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Since March, the Fed has implemented its fastest pace of rate increases in decades to try to curb inflation, which has punished households with soaring costs for food, gas, rent and other necessities. The central bank has lifted its benchmark rate by 2 full percentage points in just four meetings, to a range of 2.25 per cent to 2.5 per cent.

Those hikes have led to higher costs for mortgages, car loans and other consumer and business borrowing. Home sales have been plunging since the Fed first signalled it would raise borrowing costs.

In June, the Fed’s policy-makers signalled that they expected their key rate to end 2022 in a range of 3.25 per cent to 3.5 per cent and then to rise further next year to between 3.75 per cent and 4 per cent. If rates reached their projected level at the end of this year, they would be at the highest point since 2008.

Powell is betting that he can engineer a high-risk outcome: Slow the economy enough to ease inflation pressures yet not so much as to trigger a recession.

His task has been complicated by the economy’s cloudy picture: On Thursday, the government said the economy shrank at a 0.6 per cent annual rate in the April-June period, the second straight quarter of contraction. Yet employers are still hiring rapidly, and the number of people seeking unemployment aid, a measure of layoffs, remains relatively low.

At its meeting in July, Fed policy-makers expressed two competing concerns that highlighted their delicate task.

According to minutes from that meeting, the officials – who aren’t identified by name – have prioritized their inflation fight. Still, some officials said there was a risk that the Fed would raise borrowing costs more than necessary, risking a recession. If inflation were to fall closer to the Fed’s 2 per cent target and the economy weakened further, those diverging views could become hard to reconcile.

At last year’s Jackson Hole symposium, Powell listed five reasons why he thought inflation would be “transitory.” Yet instead it has persisted, and many economists have noted that those remarks haven’t aged well.

Powell indirectly acknowledged that history at the outset of his remarks Friday, when he said that, “at past Jackson Hole conferences, I have discussed broad topics such as the ever-changing structure of the economy and the challenges of conducting monetary policy.”

“Today,” he said, “my remarks will be shorter, my focus narrower and my message more direct.”

Comment by lscfa on Aug 26, 2022 6:30pm
9% reimbursement rate hike coming January 1, numbnuts. 
Comment by besttobe on Aug 27, 2022 10:16am
Only 5% has been determined so far, and it is a wash, as per CC. So the next couple Q's reporting will exclude any pricing relief. Not good. IMO Inflation continues at a rapid pace and the labor market increases always lag . As per the Seekingalpha opinion, the company has lost it's direction and is strategically all over the place. They will need a financing to do meaningful aquisitions ...more  
Comment by Criktwo on Aug 27, 2022 7:01pm
Post exactly garbage bashing on QIPT board
Comment by Carlito3211 on Aug 27, 2022 7:50pm
Hey Crik you should put numbnuts on ignore and be done with him. He's like a scratch on an old vinyl record. The needle keeps hitting it and skipping back to the previous track. I'll never change.
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