WEEK IN REVIEW
9.1% in June of 2022, the highest since November of 1981, from 8.6% in
May and above market forecasts of 8.8%. Energy prices rose 41.6%, the
most since April 1980, boosted by gasoline (59.9%, the largest increase
since March 1980), fuel oil (98.5%), electricity (13.7%, the largest
increase since April 2006), and natural gas (38.4%, the largest increase
since October 2005). Food costs surged 10.4%, the most since February
1981, with food at home jumping 12.2%, the most since April 1979. Prices
also increased significantly for shelter (5.6%, the most since February
1991), household furnishings and operations (9.5%), new vehicles
(11.4%), used cars and trucks (1.7%), and airline fares (34.1%). Core
CPI which excludes food and energy increased 5.9%, slightly below 6% in
May, but above forecasts of 5.7%. Data Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
the Middle East, President Biden on Friday will become the first U.S.
leader to fly directly from Tel Aviv to Saudi Arabia. On the itinerary
is somewhat of a resetting of relations, including energy security,
Israeli-Saudi ties and establishing a cohesive regional front to counter
Iran. The trip will be a big policy U-turn for Biden, who has
previously labeled the Kingdom a “pariah” and refused to talk with Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman in the aftermath of the killing of
U.S.-based columnist Jamal Khashoggi.
What’s in it for the Saudis?
Riyadh is looking for ironclad security guarantees, especially after
Biden ended U.S. support for offensive operations in Yemen. He ordered
the removal of Patriot missile batteries and other advanced military
systems in 2021, even as the kingdom was being hit by rocket attacks
from Iranian-backed Houthi rebels. Arms transfers from China to the
Saudis have also expanded by nearly 400% over the past four years, with
the U.S. continuing to refuse to sell drones to the Kingdom.
What’s in it for the U.S.? WTI crude oil (CL1:COM)
tumbled below $91 on Thursday – erasing all the gains seen in the wake
of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine – though U.S. gasoline prices remain
expensive at the pump, averaging $4.58 per gallon nationwide. Biden is
set to ask Saudi Arabia to pump even more, in the latest effort to tame
high energy prices that are weighing on the economy. According to the
International Energy Agency, the Saudis and UAE are the only two
producers with significant spare capacity, holding just under 3M barrels
a day of idle output between them (about 3% of global demand).
Outlook:
“The world has never witnessed such a major energy crisis in terms of
its depth and its complexity,” IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol warned
at an energy forum in Sydney earlier this week. “We might not have seen
the worst of it yet. This is affecting the entire world.”
It comes after Mr Musk announced he was walking away from his proposed $44bn (£37bn) takeover of Twitter on Friday.
Chairman
and CEO Jamie Dimon warned geopolitical tension, high inflation and
waning consumer confidence could hurt the economy “sometime down the
road.”
dizzying week for stocks but some respite on Friday as markets snapped
back halting a five-day slide. Traders have reduced their bets for a
bigger Fed hike and swaps are pricing in a 75bps of tightening this
month as officials are wary of more. Despite this, there is still a
47.5% chance that the US will slip into a recession within the next
year.
Crypto
crypto lender Celsius Network said on Wednesday it had filed for
bankruptcy in New York, becoming the latest victim in the cryptocurrency
sector of a dramatic plunge in token prices.
New
Jersey-based Celsius froze withdrawals last month, citing “extreme”
market conditions, cutting off access to savings for individual
investors and sending tremors through the crypto market.
In
a court filing at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for Southern District of
New York, Celsius estimated its assets and liabilities as between $1
billion to $10 billion, with more than 100,000 creditors. The company
has $167 million in cash on hand.
Bitcoin finishing 5% down on the week, it climbed for the third
consecutive day, erasing much of the losses from the beginning of the
week
