The more unbalanced Trump becomes, and the more damage he does to US Institutions and friendly countries, the faster money will leave the US due to political and financial risks.
Cc rates are up, but during the gfc, the increase lagged home and auto loans. Auto is up and home loans are just slightly up coming of long term lows. So what to make of that.
Fewer homes have transacted in the last 3 years as rates are higher now than the average mortgage rate, so fewer people should be stretched on a newer mortgage payment, so that source of debt should be more seasoned. This could be acting as a bit of a buffer on the overall economy.
The New York Fed’s quarterly Household Debt and Credit Survey (HHDC) shows that total consumer debt stands at $18.203 trillion as of the first quarter of 2025. That’s a record high.
Not really. The money was created when the loan was created. Now it’s simply transferring demand deposits. From one checking account to another. The lender will most likely just make another loan…or 5 more.
The lender is usually the federal government, who doesn’t care how much money they have vs how many student loans they give. So getting the money back will not cause any more or fewer loans.
Thus, deflationary.
It’s no coincidence that the high inflation happened at the same time that loans were put on pause. Not the full story, but part of it.
A lot of retail investors are automatically buying into the market via their 401ks. That tends to hold up the share prices of the larger companies (for now).
The smaller companies are are already showing tariff damage via their share prices, and investors have already piled on to Gold, BTC, and now Silver and Platinum.
This generally points to US assets being re-priced downwards due to US debt levels and tariff damage. US FX is down quite a bit (also aided by much lower oil prices but lets see how long that lasts)
Who knows when thay will happen though (could be violent adjustment due to another Trump antic or a slower adjustment).
What I do know is that 50% of US Consumption is being driven by the top 10% of the income distribution, and the bottom 50% are facing higher prices due to tariffs (when they are already showing some markedly higher debt interest levels).
This would generally point to people spending less in order to pay down debt or buy cheaper products (which would then reduce economic growth).
If your investment horizon is 10+ years…then this doesn’t matter all that much. If its less than 2 years…I would be a bit more concerned.
It is really hard to correctly call both the exit of an existing position and when to buy back in.
I had a fair bit of money parked in TBIL (from bonus money last year and this year) in my taxable account and used the opportunity to shift that over into dividend ETFs. I balked at moving the last 5% over to get to my target allocation but I did manage to move about 20% over in March and April when things were down. I’ll call that a win, although just barely since the increase in bond yields seemed to offset about half the equity gains (measured by broader S&P).