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Money Talk With Tiff

Money Talk With Tiff

    Money Talk With Tiff
    Episode•June 17, 2022•17 min

    Finance Friday Live 6/17 | Ep. 114

    Join me for Finance Friday Live every Friday at noon EST, streaming on YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram! These bonus podcast episodes are uploaded raw and uncut so forgive any audio issues.  Enjoy! This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Podcorn - https://podcorn.com/privacy OP3 - https://op3.dev/privacy

    Apple PodcastsSpotifyYouTubeOvercastAmazon Music

    Key Takeaways

    • 1

      The Fed raised the federal funds rate by 0.75% on June 15th to combat inflation caused by excess stimulus money

      This is the largest single rate hike since 1994

      The Fed's job is to control the monetary system and prevent economic instability

      Higher rates make borrowing more expensive, which reduces demand to match limited supply

    • 2

      Supply and demand imbalances from COVID stimulus created current inflation

      Stimulus checks and extra unemployment increased money supply

      Higher demand with constrained supply led to price increases

      Interest rate hikes aim to reduce demand and restore equilibrium

    • 3

      Credit card debt is particularly vulnerable to rising rates while fixed-rate loans are protected

      Credit cards have variable rates tied to the Fed funds rate

      Fixed-rate mortgages and car loans won't be affected by rate increases

      Suze Orman warns that carrying credit card debt now is 'asking for trouble'

    • 4

      Market volatility follows predictable supply-demand patterns

      Stock prices drop when investors sell in fear, creating a downward spiral

      This mirrors bank runs during the Great Depression

      Markets have historically recovered from every downturn

    Intro

    • Finance Friday Live episode explaining the Federal Reserve's June 15th rate hike and its economic implications for everyday consumers.
    • Tiffany, host of Finance Friday Live, provides weekly financial education content across YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram

    – Fed Rate Hike Explanation

    • The Federal Reserve raised the federal funds rate by 0.75% on June 15th - the largest single hike since 1994. The Fed funds rate is what banks use to trade money with each other.

    This is the biggest rate hike since 1994 and that's why it is a lot of people are more in tune with it and is making big news because they took a drastic measure.

    – How We Got Here: COVID Stimulus Effects

    • COVID stimulus created excess money in the economy, driving up demand while supply couldn't keep pace. This imbalance caused prices to rise as equilibrium was disrupted.

    If more people have money in their pocket, they're going to want more things because now they can afford more things. And so the demand starts going up.

    – How Rate Hikes Combat Inflation

    • Higher interest rates make borrowing more expensive for homes, loans, and credit cards, which reduces demand. As demand decreases, prices should follow downward.

    Now it's not as easy or it's not as cost efficient to get a house or to get a loan or to get a credit card... so then that makes demand start coming down.

    – Impact on Different Types of Debt

    • Credit card debt will see immediate rate increases since cards have variable rates tied to the Fed funds rate. Fixed-rate mortgages and car loans remain unaffected.

    If you have credit card debt at this time, you are asking for trouble... credit cards are variable rates. So they can raise them based on the Fed funds rate.

    – Stock Market and Economic Outlook

    • Stocks are dropping because higher rates make capital more expensive for businesses. However, strong job market suggests any recession won't be as severe as 2008-2009.

    Our jobs are strong. Like there's still a lot of people hiring and stuff like that... I don't think it will be as bad because other economic factors are looking good.

    Topics

    Federal ReserveInterest RatesInflationMonetary PolicyCredit Card DebtHousing MarketStock MarketSupply and DemandEconomic RecessionCOVID Stimulus

    Finance Friday Live 6/17 | Ep. 114

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