|    |    |   |   Published By Banyan Hill Publishing |  |  |  |     |    |   |   Published By Banyan Hill Publishing |  |  |  |     |    |   |   How the Fed Could Spark a Buying Frenzy By  Michael Carr Editor, Precision Profits
 |    |  Banyan Nation, Part of the Federal Reserve’s job is to hurt some people. Of  course, that’s not in the official job description of Fed officials. (It’s the  quiet part that we aren’t supposed to say aloud.)
 The official job description is to pursue policy targeting stable prices and maximum sustainable employment. This means that the  Fed always wants some number of  people to be unemployed.
 
 Ideally, the number of unemployed is low. But if that number  is too low, employers are forced to raise wages to attract new workers. Higher  wages increase inflation. Low unemployment can result in unstable prices and  unsustainable levels of employment.
 
 To increase unemployment as a way to fight inflation, the  Fed raises interest rates. This makes money more expensive. Businesses won’t  expand as much when rates are high. Some businesses will fail because their  profit margin is too low to survive higher interest rates.
 
 Before unemployment becomes too high, however, the Fed will  try to reverse course. It’ll begin cutting rates to restart business expansion.
 
 This is a tough job. It’s even tougher when results  take a year or more to be seen. That’s how long it takes for interest rate  changes to have an impact on economic activity.
 
 In other words, the Fed is guessing what the interest rate  should be today to affect inflation and unemployment a year from now.
 
 And there are only two possible outcomes the Fed will see.
 
 If the Fed goes too far, the economy slows too much. That’s  a recession. If the Fed gets it right, there’s a soft landing, and the economy will  continue growing slowly.
 The Fed and Soft LandingsPopular wisdom is that the Fed pulled off a soft landing  just once, in 1995. Recent research shows that 5 of the 11 Fed tightening cycles since 1965 were followed by soft  landings. 
 The author of “Landings, Soft and Hard: The Federal Reserve,  1965-2022”, a former Fed Vice Chair, argues that three of the hard landings  were caused by external shocks rather than Fed policy.
 
 He believes the 1990 recession was caused by Iraq’s invasion  of Kuwait rather than Fed policy. The global financial crisis in 2008 preempted  Fed policy. In 2020, the pandemic was the blame for the recession.
 
 If he’s right, only three recessions — 1973 to 1975, 1980  and 1981 to 1982 — were caused by the Fed. Those were also times of high  inflation.
 
 And that brings us to today. We have signs that a soft landing  is possible.
 
 Employment growth is slowing. The number of job openings is  used to measure the strength of the jobs market. The year-over-year change in  openings is at levels associated with economic slowdowns.
 
 The chart below shows monthly data collected in  the Bureau of Labor Statistics Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey.
 |  |  |     |    |   |    Number of Job Openings Is Falling 	   	(Click here to view larger image.)  Weekly data from Indeed.com confirms the slowdown. That data  also shows the slowdown appears to be ending with openings starting to grow  again.
 While the Fed has a reputation for starting recessions,  research shows that may be an incorrect view. A soft landing occurs almost half  the time. Job openings give us an indication that another soft landing is on  the way.
 
 This would be a shock to many economists. Many investors  will also be surprised. This could set off a buying frenzy in the stock market.
 
 Now is the time for us to prepare for that and  have a plan for when and what to buy. That’s why here at  Banyan  Edge, we’re working diligently behind the scenes to uncover and share top  investment ideas and strategies to give you the opportunity to profit no matter  where the market is headed.
 
 Regards,
 
   Michael Carr
 Editor, Precision Profits
 |  |  |     |    |   |  Adam O’Dell has pulled out all the stops. In his most ambitious project ever, he has finally brought together the powerhouse force of AI … and fused it with his legendary ratings system. The result is a technology with the power to crush the market by 300-to-1 … turning every $5,000 into $6.6 million. On September 19, at 1 p.m., he’s revealing how. Click here for the full details. |  |  |     |    |   |   Survey Says: Americans Have Lukewarm Expectations |    |    I tend to  take consumer surveys with a major grain of salt. The gap between what people  say and what they actually do is a wide one. 
 It’s wide  enough to make the Grand Canyon look like a sidewalk crack.
 
 Nevertheless,  it’s interesting to see what Americans are saying about their financial  situations. Now and then, there are some insights to be gleaned when we see  significant changes.
 
 The Federal  Reserve Bank of New York just published its August “Survey of  Consumer Expectations,” and the general takeaway is that  Americans are feeling pretty lukewarm.
 
 American’s feelings about their  current financial situation compared to their financial situation a year ago  deteriorated slightly in August. And their expectations for the year ahead are  also moving in the wrong direction … they’re actually rising.
  	   	(Click here to view larger image.)  Interestingly,  peak negativity hit about midway through last year. The percentage of Americans  that expect to be much better off (or at least somewhat better off) a year from  now has been trending higher for a little over a year. 
 The  percentage of Americans expecting their situation to decline a year from now  has been trending lower over the same period.
 
 So, what  conclusions can we draw from this?
 
 For one, it  seems like consumer sentiment seems to be tracking inflation. Sentiment has  improved as inflation has moderated … but cruddy sentiment, along with  inflation, are both high compared to pre-2020 levels.
 
 Americans should  also be considering the very real risks coming down the pipeline. As I have  been writing for months now, pandemic-era excess savings have now largely been  spent down, and millions of Americans who enjoyed a student loan payment  holiday are now on the hook for hundreds of dollars a month in additional  expenses.
 
 But it’s not  all doom and gloom, of course.
 
 While the  economy seems to be stuck in a high-inflation, low-growth rut, we also have the  underpinnings of a major, multidecade boom — in the form of artificial  intelligence and automation technology.
 
 It’s already  helping address the labor shortage in the U.S. economy, and it presents a  unique investing opportunity that your Banyan Edge team is tapping into.
 
 In fact,  Adam O’Dell has been testing a new trading technology against 24 years of  market data.
 
 The results are undeniable.
 
 According to his findings, the AI-driven Infinite Momentum system he has  developed had the power to beat the market by 300-to-1.
 
 The equivalent of turning $5,000 into $6.6 million.
 
 And he wants to put this AI system in your  hands. All you have to do is click this link here to RSVP for the grand premiere on Tuesday,  September 19, at 1 p.m. ET.
 
 Regards,
 
   Charles Sizemore
 Chief Editor, The Banyan Edge
 |  |  |     |    |   |  Over the last 24 years, the S&P 500 has turned a $5,000 stake into $22,000. One AI-driven system here has beaten that by 300-to-1. And we’re revealing it for the first time ever on September 19. Click here now for the full details. |  |  |   						 							 								|  										 											 												|  														 															| (c) 2023 Banyan Hill Publishing. All Rights Reserved. Protected by copyright laws of the United States and international treaties. This Newsletter may only be used pursuant to the subscription agreement. Any reproduction, copying, or redistribution, (electronic or otherwise) in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of Banyan Hill Publishing. P.O. Box 8378, Delray Beach, FL 33482. (TEL: 866-584-4096) Legal Notice
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