Thursday, July 15, 2021

FEDERAL RESERVE - WALL STREET'S BAILOUT OFFICE FOR JOE BIDEN'S CRONIES - Despite inflation, Fed will not pull back on present monetary policies

Wall Street Investment Banks Shatter Expectations While American Workers Suffer with Biden Inflation

Fed chair Jerome Powell has again reassured financial markets that, despite the significant rise in US inflation, the central bank is not going to pull back its ultra-loose monetary policies that have seen Wall Street reach record highs.

Despite inflation, Fed will not pull back on present monetary policies

Fed chair Jerome Powell has again reassured financial markets that, despite the significant rise in US inflation, the central bank is not going to pull back its ultra-loose monetary policies that have seen Wall Street reach record highs.

Powell’s assurances came in his testimony to the House Financial Services Committee yesterday in the wake of inflation data which showed that prices had jumped at an annual rate of 5.4 percent in the year to June. The rise of 0.9 percent for last month was the highest since 2008.

Federal Reserve Board chairman Jerome Powell testifies before Congress on Tuesday, June 22, 2021. (Graeme Jennings/Pool via AP)

Powell insisted that, while inflation had “increased notably” and the price rises were higher and more persistent than the Fed had anticipated, the rises were “transitory” and inflation would begin to decline.

However, he said, the Fed was prepared to “adjust monetary policy as appropriate if we saw signs that the path of inflation or longer-term inflation expectations were moving materially and persistently beyond levels consistent with our goal.”

In the face of comments from House representatives that price rises were becoming entrenched, Powell called on lawmakers to have “faith” in the Fed’s judgment that it was riskier to tighten monetary too early than too late.

“We really do believe and virtually all forecasters do believe that these things will come down of their own accord as the economy re-opens—it would be a mistake to act prematurely.”

There is always as element of shadow boxing on the issue of inflation. The central concern is not prices rises as such, but whether inflation is going to lead to an upsurge in the wages struggles of the working class.

This issue was touched on by David Scott, a Democrat representative from Georgia, who said a return to a more stable inflation rate would be advantageous. He pointed out that “wage increases will not keep pace” and price rises would create real hardship for low-income households as well as people on fixed incomes and retirees.

As Powell was giving his testimony, the Fed’s own Beige Book, an anecdotal survey of economic conditions, reported that inflationary pressures were increasing.

It stated that while some respondents “felt that pricing pressures were transitory, the majority expected further increases in input costs and selling prices in the coming months.”

Powell said the Fed policy of keeping interest rates at virtually zero and financial asset purchases at $120 billion a month—an amount of more than $1.4 trillion a year—would continue and the goal of “substantial further progress” in the economy was “still a ways off.”

The commitment brought a favourable response on Wall Street. Both the S&P 500 index and the Dow were up for the day, while the NASDAQ fell slightly. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury bond fell, indicating the belief in financial markets that the Fed is not about to start “tapering” its asset purchases in the immediate future.

The Fed’s policies are pouring billions of dollars into the coffers of the banks as they take advantage of ultra-cheap money to fund financial market deals. Goldman Sachs reported that its total revenues for the second quarter were $15.4 billion, an increase of 16 percent from a year ago and well above forecasts by analysts of $12.4 billion.

The chief factor in Goldman’s revenue rise was its asset management business where its private equity investments are located. Revenues for this division were $5.1 billion, up 144 percent from a year ago, compared to forecasts of $2.8 billion. Goldman reported that it had generated record quarterly net revenues from its private equity investments.

Both Goldman and JP Morgan reported a sharp rise in fees from advising on corporate acquisitions and initial public offerings during the second quarter. JP Morgan announced record investment banking fees of $3.6 billion. Goldman’s revenue from fees was also $3.6 billion, only marginally below the record high of $3.7 billion in the first quarter.

Notwithstanding Powell’s firm adherence to the Fed’s present course, the issue is certain to be the subject of discussion, if not opposition, at the next meeting of its policy making body on July 27 –28. Some Fed officials have already indicated their support for a windback of asset purchases, possibly starting with the mortgage-backed securities.

The fear is that if the Fed continues with the present program and inflation “runs hot,” it will have to severely clamp down in the future, possibly leading to a collapse of the financial bubble its policies have created.

The same issues have emerged within the European Central Bank following the decision earlier this month to tolerate a temporary increase in inflation above its target rate of 2 percent.

The overturn of the target of “close to, but below, 2 percent” enables the ECB to maintain interest rates at historic lows for longer and allows for the continued flow of money into the financial system via its asset purchases.

This certain to bring opposition from northern European members of the ECB’s governing council, led by Germany. They have expressed the view that the ECB’s “crisis” measures, introduced at the start of the pandemic, should start to be wound back because the crisis has passed.

In an interview with the Financial Times last weekend, ECB president Christine Lagarde forecast that differences would be raised at the next meeting of the governing council later this month.

“I’m not under the illusion that every six weeks [at monetary policy meetings] we will have unanimous consent and universal acceptance because there will be some variations, some slightly different positioning. And that is fine.”

But Lagarde made clear she was not in favour of winding back the ECB’s measures even as inflation starts to show signs of rising in Europe. She said monetary policy had to be “especially forceful and persistent” when interest rates were at their lower limit as they are at present. She said “forceful” and “persistent” were “key words” that policy makers should not “undermine or underestimate.”

The issues are the same as in the US. Such is the dependence on the flow of money from the central bank, the fear is that any reduction could set off a financial crisis. In 2011, in the wake of the global financial crisis, the ECB raised rates. That decision is regarded as having contributed to the sovereign debt crisis of 2012 which only ended when the then ECB president Mario Draghi said the central bank would do “whatever it takes” to defend the euro.

Concerns continue to be voiced about where the present policies of the major central banks will end.

Commenting in the Financial Times earlier this week, analyst Mohamed El-Erian repeated his previous warnings that the longer the Fed continued its asset purchases “the more likely it will be forced into slamming the policy brakes on at some point.” This is under conditions where speculative excesses would have built up further and more unsustainable debt would have been incurred.

The critical question for the economy and the markets in the US and elsewhere, he wrote, was whether there is still “a possibility of an orderly exit from what has been a remarkably long period of uber-loose monetary policies?”

Citigroup, Wells Fargo, and Bank of America Report Profit Surge as Biden’s Inflation Crushes American Workers

A 'Citi' sign is displayed outside Citigroup Center near Citibank headquarters in Manhattan on December 5, 2012 in New York City.
Mario Tama/Getty
3:25

Citigroup, Wells Fargo, Bank of America, and investment firm BlackRock reported increased earnings Wednesday, while everyday consumer goods prices have increased due to President Joe Biden’s inflation.

Bank of America earnings per share soared 111 percent to 78 cents, and Wells Fargo earnings surged 247 percent to 97 cents a share, as Citigroup earnings per share are set to increase 298 percent to $1.99.

Also increasing their profits, BlackRock, whose principle is a supporter of mitigating the theory of “climate change,” recorded earnings, adjusted for non-recurring costs, at $10.03 per share, along with a stock price increase of 26 percent since Biden assumed office.

In more good news for the Wall Street elites, JPMorgan Chase posted on Tuesday “second-quarter earnings of $11.9 billion, or $3.78 per share, which exceeded the $3.21 estimate of analysts surveyed by Refinitiv.”

Goldman Sachs additionally reported second-quarter earnings Tuesday “of $15.02 per share, topping analysts’ expectation of $10.24 earnings per share,” CNBC explained. “The bank posted its second-best ever quarterly investment banking revenue as a rush of IPOs hit Wall Street last quarter.”

The reaping of large profits by big banks and the Wall Street firms comes as consumer goods prices are increasing due to inflation.

But despite Biden’s claims, “No one is talking about this great, great, you know [inflation],” Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Wednesday that inflation “will likely remain elevated in coming months” before acknowledging “that price gains have been larger and more persistent than many” Democrats predicted, the Associated Press reported.

Breitbart News reported Wednesday the Producer Price Index rose 7.3 percent in June from 12 months earlier, the largest demand since 12-month data was first introduced in 2010. In comparison to May, the index rose one percent. On average during the pre-pandemic Trump administration, the index rose by around 0.2 percent per month.

The rising index translates to specific price increases for items, such as used cars (29 percent), strawberries (26 percent), blueberries (15 percent), Baguette (11 percent), furniture (9 percent), olives (6 percent), takeout/fast food (6 percent), tampons (5 percent), flowers/plants (5 percent), dog treats (4 percent), rose wine (3 percent), computers (2 percent), craft beer (2 percent), milk (1.6 percent), and bread (1.3 percent).

Meanwhile, big tech is censoring content that connects Biden’s economic polices with Biden’s inflation, presumably because increased prices for the American worker exposes the Democrat Party’s chances of retaining the House and the Senate in the 2022 midterms.

Wall Street Investment Banks Shatter Expectations While American Workers Suffer with Biden Inflation

Photo by: STRF/STAR MAX/IPx 2020 6/29/20 The Dow Jones Industrial closed up 580 points today, in spite of growing numbers of Coronavirus cases in the U.S. (New York Stock Exchange, NYC)
STRF/STAR MAX/IPx via AP
3:01

The elite wall street investment banks smashed earning expectations on Tuesday, while the American worker struggles with rising consumer good prices due to President Joe Biden’s inflation.

JPMorgan Chase posted “second-quarter earnings of $11.9 billion, or $3.78 per share, which exceeded the $3.21 estimate of analysts surveyed by Refinitiv,” CNBC reported.

Goldman Sachs also “reported second-quarter earnings of $15.02 per share, topping analysts’ expectation of $10.24 earnings per share,” CNBC continued, “The bank posted its second-best ever quarterly investment banking revenue as a rush of IPOs hit Wall Street last quarter.”

The investment banks shattering expectations comes as the American worker is shouldering inflation at a 13 year-high.

The Labor Department on Tuesday released its Consumer Price Index for June, showing  that prices rose 0.9 percent in the past month. The price hike in June marked the largest 1-month increase since June 2008.

Breitbart News also reported the the consensus forecast was for a 5.0 percent gain when measured against June of 2020, which would have been tied with May, the hottest reading since skyrocketing energy prices pushed up the index in the fall of 2008.

Inflation has outrun expectations for three months in a row. The June monthly figure is the highest since June 2008, when prices increased 1 percent in a single month.

Sarah House, senior economist for Wells Fargo’s corporate and investment bank, said “inflation pressures remain more acute than appreciated and are going to be with us for a longer period.”

“Bringing back the bad memories of the 1970s, inflation has reached a three-decade high,” the CNBC continued. “The past two years’ ’emergency’ spending packages, bond buy-backs, and printed money are repeating the worst mistakes of the Carter era.”

Since President Joe Biden has taken office, prices for consumer goods have dramatically risen:

  • Used Cars (29 percent)
  • Strawberries (26 percent)
  • Blueberries (15 percent)
  • Baguette (11 percent)
  • Furnature (9 percent)
  • Olives (6 percent)
  • Takeout/fast food (6 percent)
  • Tampons (5 percent)
  • Flowers/plants (5 percent)
  • Dog treats (4 percent)
  • Rose wine (3 percent)
  • Computers (2 percent)
  • Craft beer (2 percent)
  • Milk (1.6 percent)
  • Bread (1.3 percent)

Inflation is Surging as Wages are Falling - People are Unprepared




Atlanta Fed’s Business Inflation Expectations Remain Sky High

Atlanta, Georgia, USA downtown skyline at dusk.
Getty Images
1:25

The inflation expectations of businesses in the southeastern U.S. dipped in July, indicating that some inflationary pressure may have come down in recent weeks, data from the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta said Wednesday.

The Atlanta Fed said that companies year ahead expectations for price increases “decreased significantly” from 3.0 percent to 2.8 percent. That brings the measure down to the May level, which was the highest ever recorded in data going back nearly a decade.

The survey asks businesses in the Sixth Federal Reserve District—which includes Alabama, Florida, and Georgia, and portions of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee—about prices as well as current and expected business conditions, profit margins, and sales.

Year-Ahead Inflation Expectations

The survey was released Wednesday following data showing much higher than expected inflation for June, both in the Producer Price Index and the Consumer Price Index. While limited to the Atlanta Fed’s territory, the survey’s results bolster the case of those who argue that high inflation will be transitory. Fed chair Jerome Powell is expected to argue in testimony before a Congressional panel Wednesday that inflation will moderate but remain elevated in the months ahead.

 

Record inflation in US leads to double digit increases in basic consumer goods

On Tuesday the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), released the latest consumer price index (CPI) data from June, which showed that prices for basic consumer goods and services continue to rise at historic rates. The BLS reported that the CPI rose 0.9 percent from May, nearly double what Wall Street analysts had predicted, leading to a year-over-year CPI increase of 5.4 percent, the highest in 13 years.

The core inflation growth statistic, which just measures the increase in consumer goods, minus energy and food, showed a 4.5 percent year-over-year increase, which is the highest since 1991.

A woman carries a box of food away as hundreds others impacted by the COVID-19 virus outbreak wait in line at a Salvation Army center in Chelsea, Mass. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Driving the soaring increase in the CPI is the rising cost for energy commodities such as fuel oil and gasoline, which the BLS recorded rising 44.2 percent in the last year. Used car prices are also showing an unprecedented rise in prices, jumping 10.5 percent in June, which follows a 7.3 percent increase in May and 10 percent in April. New car prices also rose 2 percent in June, the biggest increase since May 1981.

The meteoric rise in car prices is being driven by two main factors: a global semiconductor shortage, components used in nearly every modern electronic device and a so-called labor shortage. Major car companies, such as General Motors, have lamented the fact that workers are unwilling to work in COVID-19-infested factories for the $16.67 an hour offered to new hires under its agreement with the United Auto Workers (UAW) union.

The labor contracts signed by the unions have long included raises at or below the rate of inflation and lump sum payments instead of increases in hourly wages. The contract proposed by the UAW at Volvo Trucks would provide an average annual raise of only 2 percent over six years for the top-paid workers at the factory. With the annual rate of inflation at over 5 percent, this would result in a nearly 20 percent cut in real wages over the life of the contract.

Rising prices have been one of the major factors in the growth of the class struggle, including the five-week strike by Volvo workers who have rejected three UAW-backed contracts and are demanding substantial raises and a cost-of-living escalator, a demand abandoned by the UAW long ago.

As the corporatist trade unions and companies conspire to depress wages and increase profits, workers are finding it difficult just to afford basic food items, leading to an increase in food insecurity across the US. Some 20 million adults are without enough to eat as of mid-June, according to data collected by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, while the latest US Census Bureau survey found that 42 million US adults reported not being able to afford the types of food they want to eat last month.

Food price changes since February 2020 (Insider)

The BLS found that the price of beef rose by 4.5 percent in June, while eggs, pork and ham all rose by 3.1 percent. Milk prices also increased by 0.5 percent, potatoes increased by 1.5 percent. The price of fruits and vegetables have increased by 6 percent since February 2020, while cakes, cookies and bread have all jumped over 4 percent in the same time period.

To give a sense of the rapid increase in prices within the last two years, below is a list of staple items with the average June 2019 price listed first, followed by June 2021.

* Gasoline has increased by 32 cents from $2.83 a gallon to $3.15, an 11.3 percent jump. Earlier this month, AAA said prices would rise another 10-20 cents by the end of August, meaning it will cost $53.28 to fill up a standard sedan and $86.58 for a pickup truck.

* A pound of boneless, skinless chicken breast rose by 27 cents from $3.08 to $3.35, a 9.0 percent increase.

* Average rent has increased by 5.1 percent, from $1,712 to $1,799.

* A pound of ground beef cost $0.67 more than it did two years ago, from $4.20 to $4.87

* The average household electric bill has increased by 4.2 percent, or roughly $5.00 from $121 to $126

While the national average for rent has increased by 5.1 percent in the last two years, just this year alone, apartments.com found that rent prices are up 7.5 percent this year, three times higher than the normal average rate of increase.

Over a dozen cities have seen a 10 percent jump in rents over the past year according to Zillow, a real estate website. From February 2020 to May 2021 rent prices in Stockton, California have increased by $268. In Boise, Idaho the average increase is $236 a month, followed by Ventura, California ($229) Phoenix, Arizona ($195), Fresno, California ($193), Sacramento ($184) and Stamford, Connecticut ($180).

As rent, food, energy and consumer goods increase in prices, real average weekly earnings for workers have completely stagnated, leaving many with hard choices as to what bills to pay, or who gets to eat.

In an interview with the Washington Post, Pamela Porter, 68, of Fort Worth, Texas spoke on the difficulty of making ends meet on a fixed income. “I’ve noticed food prices going up. And gasoline. Oh my. That shot through the roof,” said Porter, who just received a notice that her rent is rising by $40 a month, to $780. The increase in rent, said Porter, “could definitely impact my ability to buy groceries and buy my medicine. I’m not going to even mention car repairs. Life shouldn’t be this hard.”

Despite the financial squeeze being placed on millions of workers and their families, the Biden administration has no intentions of re-upping the Centers for Disease Control eviction moratorium, which is scheduled to end in less than three weeks.

Similarly, Biden and the Democrats, beholden to the same financial oligarchy as the Republicans, have indicated there will be no extension on federal unemployment benefits, including the $300-a-week booster, which is set to expire September 6.

While some companies have been forced to offer one-time bonuses to new-hires to fill some 9 million available jobs in the US, BLS data shows that real earnings for workers in the US have flatlined for over a decade, with average weekly earnings down 2.2 percent from May 2020 to May 2021. The only reason the figure is not higher is because the BLS found that there has been a 0.6 percent increase in the average work week.

Earning of all employees, private sector, January 2011-May 2021

Overall, the Labor Department found that average hourly earnings increased by 0.3 percent from May, bringing the total to 3.6 percent over the year, nearly 2 percent less than inflation. The modest wage gains some employers have given are not permanent, with many companies already rescinding pandemic-related bonus and shift premiums.

Speaking to CNBC, David Weliver, founder of the personal finance site Money Under 30, explained that it is very unlikely that wages will be able to keep pace with inflation. “There’s going to be a lag,” Weliver said. “The prices at the gas pump or grocery store may change very quickly but you might not get that raise for a year.”

The miniscule increase in wages has led to complaints from the financial oligarchy and its media mouthpieces of a “dreaded spiral” in which increased wages will drive inflation and vice versa. The ruling class fears that a “wages push” by the working class could lead to a collapse of the inflated stock market, which depends on the continued suppression of workers’ wages.

The struggles by workers at Volvo, Frito-Lay, Warrior Met Coal, ATI, ExxonMobil, St. Vincent Hospital in Worcester, Massachusetts and other locations are an initial sign of the explosive battles by the working class that are on the horizon, in the US and internationally, against the social inequality produced by capitalism and the corporatist trade unions and big business parties that enforce it.


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 The close collaboration between the US Treasury, the Federal Reserve and the multi-billion dollar asset management firm Blackrock in devising the March 2020 rescue operation for Wall Street has been revealed in an article published in the New York Times yesterday.


World’s largest asset management firm was “front and center” of Fed’s Wall Street bailout

Nick Beams

The close collaboration between the US Treasury, the Federal Reserve and the multi-billion dollar asset management firm Blackrock in devising the March 2020 rescue operation for Wall Street has been revealed in an article published in the New York Times yesterday.

According to the article, Larry Fink, the CEO of Blackrock, the world’s biggest asset management firm, was “in frequent touch” with US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Fed chair Jerome Powell “in the days before and after many of the Fed’s emergency programs were announced in late March.”

Chairman of the Federal Reserve Jerome Powell (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

The extent of the collaboration is revealed in new emails obtain by the newspaper together with information that has been previously made public.

In one newly obtained email, Fink refers to planning for the rescue measures as “the project” that he and the Fed were “working on together.”

As the article notes, “America’s top economic officials were in constant contact with a Wall Street executive whose firm stood to benefit financially from the rescue,” showing “how intertwined Blackrock has become with the federal government.”

Blackrock’s close collaboration with the Fed and Treasury came at a crucial point in the development of a crisis in financial markets which began with the onset of the pandemic in March and fears in corporate circles over the response in the working class amid walkouts by workers insisting that safety measures be out in place.

The Fed responded to the initial turbulence in the markets by cutting interest rates. But these measures proved to be insufficient and the potential for a major meltdown in the markets emerged in the week ending March 20 when the $21 trillion US Treasury bond market—the bedrock of the US and global financial system—froze.

Instead of providing a “safe haven” for investors it moved to the centre of the crisis as Treasuries were sold off and no buyers could be found as the sell-off extended to all areas of the financial system.

Faced with a disaster when the markets re-opened, Mnuchin, Powell and Fink were engaged in a series of discussions over the weekend of March 21–22 to devise a rescue package. According to the Times report, Mnuchin spoke to Fink five times over the two days, more than anyone else, other than Powell with whom he spoke nine times.

One of the most significant features of the rescue measures announced on Monday March 23 was the decision by the Fed, for the first time ever, to buy corporate bonds which, as the Times noted, “were becoming nearly impossible to sell as investors sprinted to convert their holdings to cash.”

Blackrock had already closely collaborated with the Fed developing its response to the 2008 financial crisis was thereby set to play a key role in the March intervention.

The article pointed out that, while Blackrock signed a non-disclosure agreement on March 22 restricting officials from sharing information about the upcoming measures, the way in which the rescue package was devised “mattered to Blackrock.”

The decision of the Fed to buy corporate bonds and provide an underpinning for the market was significant and involved two key areas of Blackrock’s operations. One of the ways it makes profit is by managing money for clients charging a preset fee. But assets under management were contracting as investors went for cash and its business model was under threat.

Blackrock is also a major player in the short-term debt markets which were coming “under intense stress” as investors moved their holdings to cash.

Electronic Traded Funds (ETFs), which track market indexes but which trade like a stock, were also severely impacted.

In the words of the Times article: “Corporate bonds were difficult to trade and near impossible to issue in mid-March 2020. Prices on some high-grade corporate ETFs, including one of Blackrock’s, were out of whack relative to the value of the underlying assets.”

As Gregg Gelenzis, associate director for economic policy at the Center for American Progress told the Times: “This was the first time that ETFs came under stress in a really systemic way.”

In the rescue package the Fed committed itself to buying already existing debt as well as new bonds and also decided it would purchase ETFs with the result that the “bond market and fund recovery was nearly instant.”

As the Times article notes, while practically all of Wall Street benefited from the Fed’s intervention, and other financial firms were “consulted” apart from Blackrock “no other company was as front and center.”

The closeness of the relationship between Blackrock and the financial and economic arms of the state, the US Treasury and the Fed, were highlighted in a comment by William Birdthistle, of the Chicago-Kent College of Law and the author of a book on funds, cited in the article.

He said Blackrock was “about as close to a government arm as you can be, without being the Federal Reserve.”

The Fed makes every effort to cover up that relationship in order to try to preserve the fiction that it is not beholden to Wall Street and operates as an independent public authority concerned above all with the state of the economy and the welfare of the population.

The Times article recalled a news conference in July 2020 in which Powell was asked about the discussions with Fink.

“I can’t recall exactly what those conversations were,” he said, “but they would have been about what he is seeing in the market and things like that.

He said there were not “very many” conversations and that the Blackrock chief was “typically trying to make sure that we are getting good service from the company he founded the leads.”

Powell’s claim that, in the midst of the most significant crisis since the meltdown of 2008—with a potential to go even further, as the freeze in the Treasury market showed—he could not recall those conversations simply does not pass muster.

The value of every crisis, it has been rightly said, is that it reveals the real relations that are obscured and covered over in “normal” times.

And that is the case here. The economic arms of the capitalist state are not some independent authority but function every day in the interests of the corporate and financial oligarchy, servicing its needs and interests above all else.

  

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Wall Street Investment Banks Shatter Expectations While American Workers Suffer with Biden Inflation
Photo by: STRF/STAR MAX/IPx 2020 6/29/20 The Dow Jones Industrial closed up 580 points today, in spite of growing numbers of Coronavirus cases in the U.S. (New York Stock Exchange, NYC)
STRF/STAR MAX/IPx via AP
3:01

The elite wall street investment banks smashed earning expectations on Tuesday, while the American worker struggles with rising consumer good prices due to President Joe Biden’s inflation.

JPMorgan Chase posted “second-quarter earnings of $11.9 billion, or $3.78 per share, which exceeded the $3.21 estimate of analysts surveyed by Refinitiv,” CNBC reported.

Goldman Sachs also “reported second-quarter earnings of $15.02 per share, topping analysts’ expectation of $10.24 earnings per share,” CNBC continued, “The bank posted its second-best ever quarterly investment banking revenue as a rush of IPOs hit Wall Street last quarter.”

The investment banks shattering expectations comes as the American worker is shouldering inflation at a 13 year-high.

The Labor Department on Tuesday released its Consumer Price Index for June, showing  that prices rose 0.9 percent in the past month. The price hike in June marked the largest 1-month increase since June 2008.

Breitbart News also reported the the consensus forecast was for a 5.0 percent gain when measured against June of 2020, which would have been tied with May, the hottest reading since skyrocketing energy prices pushed up the index in the fall of 2008.

Inflation has outrun expectations for three months in a row. The June monthly figure is the highest since June 2008, when prices increased 1 percent in a single month.

Sarah House, senior economist for Wells Fargo’s corporate and investment bank, said “inflation pressures remain more acute than appreciated and are going to be with us for a longer period.”

“Bringing back the bad memories of the 1970s, inflation has reached a three-decade high,” the CNBC continued. “The past two years’ ’emergency’ spending packages, bond buy-backs, and printed money are repeating the worst mistakes of the Carter era.”

Since President Joe Biden has taken office, prices for consumer goods have dramatically risen:

  • Used Cars (29 percent)
  • Strawberries (26 percent)
  • Blueberries (15 percent)
  • Baguette (11 percent)
  • Furnature (9 percent)
  • Olives (6 percent)
  • Takeout/fast food (6 percent)
  • Tampons (5 percent)
  • Flowers/plants (5 percent)
  • Dog treats (4 percent)
  • Rose wine (3 percent)
  • Computers (2 percent)
  • Craft beer (2 percent)
  • Milk (1.6 percent)
  • Bread (1.3 percent)

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