Simon Ree Profile picture
Feb 5 9 tweets 3 min read
If the dollar is set to rally from here, what does that mean for inflation? A short 🧵

Conventional wisdom holds that if the dollar rallies, US inflation will fall. A good narrative, as the US is a net importer, and imports become cheaper when the dollar strengthens

BUT...
1/8
...but note how in 2022 the dollar peaked right at the same time as core CPI peaked. Sometimes narratives don't work so well

2/8 Image
The dollar rallied hard late last week from a potential key level #bigflip

3/8 Image
A much hotter than expected jobs number (517k) with the unemployment rate (3.4%) at 54-year lows was the catalyst #bigflip

4/8 Image
We also saw a significant improvement in ISM last week, from contractionary territory back into expansionary #bigflip

5/8 Image
Leaving the market with doubts over whether the Fed is as close to the end of its hiking cycle as was assumed

6/8 Image
The dollar will rally if the market is concerned the Fed is behind the curve (again) and has more work to do. The dollar rallying won't itself cool inflation fears, a higher terminal will

7/8
I'll be discussing these issues in context at a free online workshop I'm hosting next Thursday. If this is of interest to you, please come along! taooftrading.com/jumpstart

8/8
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More from @simon_ree

Jan 3
The vast majority of the statistics you read regarding the stock market are plagued by small sample fallacy and/or gambler’s fallacy

With that disclaimer out of the way, here’s the “January Barometer” explained

1/4
The performance of the S&P 500 in January has predicted the year’s course with 72.2% accuracy since 1950. “So goes January, so goes the year”

15/18 of pre-election years followed January’s lead

2/4
When $SPX records a gain in the first 5 days of January, this has preceded full-year gains 83% of the time (13/18 for pre-election years)

3/4
Read 4 tweets
Jan 2
Since 1928, the S&P 500 has only posted back-to-back negative years on 4 previous occasions

So that makes another down year in 2023 highly unlikely, right?

Well, maybe not (a short 🧵)
The first time since 1928 the S&P posted consecutive down years was 1929 to 1933

It happened again in 1939-41

Then again in 1973-74 and again in 2000-02
With the exception of 1939-41 (the outbreak of World War II), all back-to-back annual losses in the S&P have occurred during/after the Fed raising the FFR and during a recession
Read 7 tweets

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