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More Signs We’re Slowing Down

Consumer savings are getting tapped …China might be headed toward more lockdowns …oil is in freefall … which should be big for cooling inflation

Another day, another sign of a coming slowdown.

No one is escaping inflation. As you’re well aware, prices have been soaring for more than a year. From gas, to groceries, to rent, there’s been nowhere to hide.

But until recently, the U.S. consumer had a trump card – pandemic savings.

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From the beginning of the pandemic through the end of 2021, U.S. households amassed $2.7 trillion in extra savings.

But news yesterday is that Americans are now tapping this savings glut.

From The Wall Street Journal:

Americans are starting to dip into the huge pile of savings they accumulated over the first two years of the pandemic…

But while it’s good that consumers have this cash cushion, there’s also a potential downside.

***What does “staying in the game,” as Zandi calls it, really mean?

Well, it means that consumers are paying the higher prices for all sorts of goods and services. This keeps demand high, which fuels inflation.

This alone is a problem. But there’s a secondary concern…

These higher prices are being financed with one-time Covid-dollars that won’t be replenished.

So, what happens when this artificial savings glut is tapped out and suddenly the U.S. consumer’s monthly budget – which clearly is already in the negative, if people are dipping into savings – runs smack into inflation-fueled higher prices?

Well, there’s the risk that businesses will face an abrupt gap down in demand, as opposed to a more gradual, tempered decline that would have happened if the U.S. consumer’s continued buying wasn’t (temporarily) enabled by pandemic savings.

In other words, the “healthy” consumer who is still spending today could be revealed as the “financial emperor with no clothes” – or rather, the emperor with insufficient inflation-adjusted disposable income.

But this artificially strong U.S. consumer has good and bad implications.