With the world turning upside down, look at what sovereign funds are dumping in order to buy dips in gold. Plus more inflation is on the way.

Stay Focused On The Big Picture, Not The Volatility
June 22 (King World News) – 
Egon von Greyerz:  Xi, like Putin, is stacking gold. The official numbers are soaring. And what is this telling us? I’m guessing it has a lot to do with building trust the old-fashioned way: With gold in the mix of its trade settlement platforms and swaps.

Dumping US Treasuries & Dollars To Buy Gold
Egon von Greyerz:  Since 2014 in general, and 2022 in particular, the level of foreigners dumping Uncle Sam’s IOUs is breathtaking. It makes it all too clear to any holding even a rudimentary understanding of the bond market that the US will be financing its own deficits at levels (and trillions) which end empires. For years, the US has pretended to be what it once was: Respected and credible. But its balance sheet, is no different than just any other banana republic.

Why are so many so nonchalant with the higher interest rate world we are now in?
Peter Boockvar:  I believe more relevant than Powell reiterating what the dot plot told us last week was Atlanta president Bostic yesterday afternoon saying “I don’t expect rate cut for most of 2024.” I’ll argue again that higher for longer is more important right now than if the Fed hikes another 25 or 50 bps at this point. 

This was an article I read the other day on Bloomberg News to this point and to the interest rate shock therapy we’ve been given, “Hedging Failure Hammers Private Equity as Debt Costs Skyrocket.” It said “Many buyout firms considered hedging against rising interest rates a waste of time and money. Their debt laden companies are now paying the price…Yet for all their savvy dealmaking, even the titans of private equity are getting caught out by the swift rise in interest rates – which is costing the companies they own billions in extra interest and threatens to push scores of them into default. Lulled by a decade of cheap money and easy profits, boldface names like KKR, Platinum Equity and Clayton Dubilier & Rice now face a reckoning of their own making.” 

I’m just amazed how nonchalant so many are with this higher rate environment that we’re in. The lack of appreciation of what higher rates means and the continuous tightening we’re seeing each and every day when someone’s debt is coming due or whose interest rate is resetting higher. The economic downturn is not an event, it is a process and a death by a thousand cuts I’ll express again…

Bank of England
The Bank of England, not happy with yesterday’s CPI print, surprised us with a 50 bps rate hike to 5% instead of raising by 25 bps. Seven voted for it while two wanted to do nothing. While they expect inflation to slow from here, “The MPC recognizes that the 2nd round effects in domestic price and wage developments generated by external cost shocks are likely to take longer to unwind than they did to emerge. There has been significant upside news in recent data that indicates more persistence in the inflation process, against the background of a tight labor market and continued resilience in demand.”

And they left the door open for more, “If there were to be evidence of more persistent pressures, then further tightening in monetary policy would be required.” As we’ve already seen a sharp rise in the 2 yr gilt yield over the past few weeks of 50 bps, it is little changed in response. The 10 yr yield, on the tougher BoE, is down by 5 bps. The pound too is not moving much either but still stands around its highest level vs the US dollar since April last year. 

This hike follows a surprise 50 bps rate increase from the Norges Bank in Norway to 3.75%. The Governor said “If we do not raise the policy rate, prices and wages could continue to rise rapidly and inflation can become entrenched. It may then become more costly to bring inflation down again.” They said rates will likely rise again in August. 

The Swiss National Bank continues to play it really slow as they hiked by 25 bps to just 1.75%. Central banks in Indonesia and the Philippines kept rates unchanged as expected….more here