Another week passed, and the number of jobless claims increased further. That was clearly not expected by the Fed, as the recent minutes shows. What does it all mean for the gold market?
Unemployment Claims Rose Further
Initial jobless claims have become one the most important data about the US economy these days. So, let’s take a look at the chart below, which offers the updated graph revealing the number of new claims for unemployment benefits.
Chart 1: US Initial Jobless Claims from March 23, 2019 to April 4, 2020
As one can see, in the week of March 28 to April 4, 6.6 millions of Americans applied for the unemployment benefit. As the chart shows, this is a lower number than the 6.9 million in the previous week. Still, it means that
in just three weeks, almost 16.8 million of US workers applied for unemployment benefits! Surely, part of that number is caused by the poor construction of the government rescue package, which encourages people to go for unemployment, simply because the average worker can get 16 percent more collecting unemployment than he would on the job.
However, the number remains unbelievable high. The official
unemployment rate increased from 3.5 to 4.4 percent in March, but it did not capture the full monthly data. Given that 16.8 million of US workers have applied,
the real unemployment rate is likely to be higher than 15 percent! It would mean that the US unemployment rate is already above the
Great Recession levels – and that it could increase further toward the level last time seen during the
Great Depression.
FOMC Minutes
The
recently published minutes of the
FOMC meeting from March 15 show that the
Fed did not understand the gravity of the situation. Although all participants saw US economic activity as likely to decline in the coming quarter and viewed downside risks to the economic outlook as having increased significantly,
they have been clearly caught off guard by how quickly the economy has actually deteriorated.
Indeed, the minutes show that “Participants observed that businesses would be more likely to lay off workers on a major scale if the downturn in economic activity came to be perceived as likely to be
protracted.”
Well, it turned out that
almost 17 million of Americans applied for unemployment benefits in mere three weeks. The Fed clearly did not expect such a rapid and deep economic shock! Their poor judgement is striking. Please read this part of the minutes:
Several participants emphasized that the temporary nature of the shock to economic activity, the fact that the shock arose in the nonfinancial sector, and the healthy state of the U.S. banking system all implied that the current situation was not directly comparable with the previous decade's financial crisis and it need not be followed by negative effects on economic activity as long-lasting as those associated with that crisis.
First of all,
this is not a temporary shock – unless you “define” temporary as “until the accepted treatment slash vaccine arrives”. We will have social distancing – in one form or another – for months. In the last
Fundamental Gold Report, I explained thoroughly why I don’t buy the story of V-shaped recovery.
Second,
the US economy is not healthy. To be clear, commercial banks have more capital and are indeed in better shape. But if they are so rock-solid, why the Fed intervened in the
repo market even before the
pandemic? As a reminder,
the corporate debt of the US nonfinancial companies is at record highs. We could thus expect corporate defaults in the coming days and weekls. Moreover, the US households have little savings or cash buffer. More than 30 percent of renters did not pay their rent by April 5, according to data from 13 million units published by the
National Multifamily Housing Council, compared to almost 20 percent who didn’t pay by March 5. The segments of the economy are interconnected,
so the problems of companies and renters can easily turn into issues for the financial institutions, including commercial banks.
Third, the current
economic crisis could prove worse than the Great Recession. In terms of the unemployment rate and jobless claims,
it is already much more worse!
Implications for Gold
All this means that the Fed’s worst case scenario, which assumes no recovery until next year, is more likely to happen that the more optimistic one, in which economic activity starts to rebound in the second half of this year.
Indeed, the Fed is slowly learning that the situation is really serious. This is why on Thursday,
the US central bank took additional steps to provide up to $2.3 trillion in loans to support the economy. In particular, the Fed started the Main Street Lending Program to ensure credit flows to small and mid-sized businesses.
However, as I explained it before, fiscal and monetary stimulus
will not fully compensate for loss of output and income. The US economy is simply too big. And please remember that there is no free lunch. It means that all these rescue packages will increase the public debt and hamper productivity growth.
It is, of course, possible that the worst is behind us, the scientist will develop the new silver bullet, and the economy and the stock market will recover quickly. However,
I think that we are just entering a recession. And no stock market bottom has never occurred outside of a recession. So, if history is any guide, the worst might actually be yet to come.
It means that the price of gold is likely to go higher later this year, when the full scale of the economic calamity will be clear to all investors.
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Disclaimer: Please note that the aim of the above analysis is to discuss the likely long-term impact of the featured phenomenon on the price of gold and this analysis does not indicate (nor does it aim to do so) whether gold is likely to move higher or lower in the short- or medium term. In order to determine the latter, many additional factors need to be considered (i.e. sentiment, chart patterns, cycles, indicators, ratios, self-similar patterns and more) and we are taking them into account (and discussing the short- and medium-term outlook) in our Trading Alerts.