Monday, July 3, 2023

🗓 Mid-year review

Plus: Markets check-in | Monday, July 03, 2023
 
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Presented By Consensys
 
Axios Macro
By Neil Irwin and Courtenay Brown · Jul 03, 2023

Happy Independence Day! We're off tomorrow for the Fourth and back Wednesday.

  • Today, a look at how the U.S. economy and markets are holding up as we turn the bend into the second half of 2023. 🇺🇸

Situational awareness: Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen's long-discussed trip to China is now officially scheduled, for Thursday through Sunday. Expect discussion of U.S. export controls on advanced technology, China's stance toward restructuring in emerging market debts, and much more. 🇨🇳

Today's newsletter, edited by Javier E. David and copy edited by Katie Lewis, is 684 words, a 2½-minute read.

 
 
1 big thing: A mid-year assessment for the economy
Illustration of a one hundred dollar bill on a monthly calendar

Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios

 

Gloom-and-doom pessimists who predicted 2023 would be a year of economic misery have been wrong (at least as the second half gets underway). Those who predicted a gradual rebalancing with limited pain have been right.

Why it matters: Things could obviously go wrong in any number of ways from here, but so far the immaculate disinflation — what had seemed a remote scenario in which inflation comes down without a recession — has materialized.

  • That said, it has been slower than ideal, with inflation still tracking well above what most Americans — or Federal Reserve policymakers — consider acceptable.

By the numbers: The labor market has shown only the mildest slippage from a super-hot 2022. The unemployment rate was 3.7% in May, up from 3.5% in December (the June number is due out Friday).

  • Employers have added an average of 314,000 jobs a month, robust by any historical standard but slower than last year's pace of 460,000 per month.
  • The share of 25- to 54-year-olds who are employed has kept rising this year, to 80.7% from 80.1% in December, a sign this economy keeps putting more people in their prime working years into jobs.
  • The number of new jobless claims averaged 213,000 a week in 2022 — and 231,000 so far in 2023. Higher, yes, but hardly crisis-level.

Back in December, Fed officials projected that unemployment would be around 4.6% at the end of 2023. Unless the labor market falls off a cliff in the next few months, they were too pessimistic.

State of play: The inflation trend is in the right direction, though with less alacrity than would be desirable. Over the past 12 months, the overall Consumer Price Index is up 4.1%, compared with 6.4% as of December.

  • But that has been driven by energy and other commodity prices normalizing after their surge in the early days of the Ukraine war. Core inflation, excluding food and energy, is coming down more slowly.
  • Core CPI was 5.7% for the 2022 calendar year and has been an annualized 5.1% through the first five months of 2023.

Yes, but: The disinflation has been enough to leave workers with more purchasing power. Average hourly earnings have been growing more slowly than they were in 2022, but inflation has come down by more, and so real wages are slightly up.

  • Average hourly earnings for all private-sector workers are up 4.3% over the last year, compared to 4.1% headline inflation.
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A message from Consensys

Global survey on crypto and web3 points to shift in online user behavior
 
 

People worldwide are supportive of web3 concepts, according to a recent survey published by Consensys with YouGov. Respondents globally believe they make valuable contributions online and are shifting toward:

  • Active participation.
  • Empowerment.
  • Broader community ownership.

Learn more.

 
 
2. Meanwhile, in markets …
Data: Federal Reserve; Chart: Axios Visuals

The mid-year picture in financial markets is similarly benign, though not without some bumps along the way.

State of play: A strong first half of the year for the stock market has driven the S&P 500 index up 16.4% (16.9% including reinvested dividends). The S&P is now only about 7% below its early 2022 peak.

  • That has been enough to boost Americans' wealth, improve CEO confidence and prompt some chatter of a new bull market being underway.
  • Yet beneath the surface, bond prices tell a somewhat more complicated story.

Interest rates, as reflected in the market for Treasuries, have experienced a round trip so far in 2023. For example, the two-year yield — a good proxy for market expectation of medium-term Fed policy — soared from the low 4% range in January to over 5% in early March.

  • It collapsed following the demise of Silicon Valley Bank in mid-March, amid fears of a systemic banking system crisis.
  • Then, it rebounded to nearly its pre-SVB highs, as a much-feared credit freeze failed to materialize. It was 4.9% as of Friday.

Between the lines: Markets have become more confident that the economy is strong enough to shrug off banking system troubles, but that also means the Fed will have to keep rates higher for longer.

  • It's a big contrast with last year, when higher rates tended to trigger a stock market selloff.
  • Now, higher rates have coincided with a stronger stock market, suggesting conviction that the corporate sector can weather the storm of higher rates from the Fed.

The bottom line: So far so good for the economy and markets in 2023. The question now is whether it will last.

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A message from Consensys

Understand the web3 paradigm shift
 
 

Respondents to Consensys' first-of-its-kind global survey on crypto and web3 expressed support for web3 concepts.

  • "The survey supports the emergence of a decentralized trust paradigm that empowers users and communities," says Joe Lubin, co-founder of Ethereum and founder and CEO of Consensys.
 
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