The #PCE Report: And there it is. I have been warning you all about it for the better part of 6 weeks, but we are now seeing the effects of the strong economy and uptick in demand in January. The PCE report came in today, with regular PCE coming in at 5.4% (Previously 5.3%), and the Core-PCE (PCE - Food & Energy) coming in at 4.7% (Previously 4.6%), not to mention that both were also about 0.3% above expectation, and the PCE rose 0.6% on the month-over-month report (The biggest increase since June 2022).

Now, this really puts us in a tough spot. Because 1 of two things will happen. Either the FED will hike rates by more than currently expected which would send markets down, or the #FED will stay on its current path in hopes that the lag of rate hikes kicks in and does the job (Rate hikes take about 6 months to assume their full effect). The only thing is that they take the risk of losing further control over inflation, which would then force them to raise rates even higher.

So the FED has to make a decision since we can't have inflation going up again. The longer this process takes, the higher rates go. The higher rates go, the higher the possibility of a #recession which would kick markets down (History suggests this will eventually happen as it usually does). Currently, markets are pricing the peak rates at 5.45% (This was 5.05% just a month ago), so it's slowly ticking up.

FED Members: We also had FED members speak today, and after the PCE report I was very intrigued to see what they had to say. This is obviously very important since they are the ones tasked with getting inflation down, so hearing what they have to say gives insight into what they might do next: 👇

- Inflation Risk Has Ticked To The Upside.

- Disinflation Is Usually Met With A Recession.

- Inflation Is Fueled By Causes Not Seen Historically.

This to me is the FED once again pulling the same tricks, saying something in the least worrying way they can. Obviously, I understand this, the FED knows the effects they can have on markets, and they don't want to cause pre-emptive chaos/worry, but it doesn't take much to understand what they're eluding to. What I take from this is that the FED realizes that inflation has gotten a little out of hand again and that they know that uncertain scenario (Russia & Ukraine, the Covid pandemic, supply chain issues) has put them in a situation where avoiding a recession becomes increasingly difficult.

As I said, the longer inflation stays elevated, the higher rates will go and the higher the chance of a recession in the US. Inflation must be controlled, that's all. It must be done with as few hikes as possible, and quickly as possible. Otherwise, be ready for one more leg down in markets.-JIRO. #Binance #crypto2023