You're ignoring the rise of 0% interest rates to 3.75% interest rates, which is incredibly hawkish (and effectively is destroying money).
Proof is in the pudding.
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US Savings are now averaging only 3.5% recently. Yes, a lot of people saved up during COVID19 but a lot of that money has been spent / disappeared by now. Pre-COVID19, we were saving 7% or so, so we're well below our "previous" saving rate as a country.
The FOMC is incredibly hawkish, and the "destruction of money" is at the highest rates its been in decades, and likely to grow higher as more-and-more people become concerned about inflation. Furthermore, CPI has dropped to 6.5% (down from 9% earlier this year). We're actually on the right track.
If you think I'm wrong, feel free to buy TIPS (Treasury Inflation Protected Securities), which make more money in times of inflation. I-Bonds are an easier buy IMO as well but have a $10,000 limit. (I did get my I-bonds for the year, locking in at the previous 9.6% inflation rate). Most economic data is showing a severe destruction of cash flow / savings. Inflation continues to decline (though not as much of a decline as we wanted... it is in fact declining by all measures).
Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index Change from Month One Year Ago April 2023 4.4 % March
www.bea.gov
PCE is the preferred methodology of measuring inflation (even if the US Government itself uses CPI). PCE is down to 6.2% on an annualized basis.
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Lately, products that posted some of the most notable price surges last year have seen slumping prices.
www.axios.com
It takes a while for these measures to kick in, but as early as August 2022 we were seeing the effects of this hawkish policy and "demand destruction" so to speak. Used Car inventory shot up dramatically in August. A few months later (September, October), we're seeing more and more signs of inflation calming down.
We need more time, and it probably won't be controlled until late 2023. It just takes a long time for this crap to take effect. But the Fed is on the right track for sure.
And how much did the stock market / crypto go up when inflation hit 9% in March?
Too many stocks are growth-strategy, which seems to do poorly during inflation. If the cost of goods goes up, then promises of future-wealth disappears. Inflation is only good if your companies are
currently making things. But if you're just a company that constantly promises to "make something awesome later" (but are losing money right now, like Uber, AMC, Gamestop, etc. etc.), then inflation just kills you before you take off.
Seems to be the same thing with cryptocurrencies. They were an awful inflation hedge.