@theMarket; Between a Rock and a Hard Place

By Bill SchmickiBerkshires Columnist
Print Story | Email Story
Bill Schmick
Pity poor Ben Bernanke and his men of the Federal Reserve! Caught between rising inflation and a declining dollar on one hand and an economy teetering on the edge of slow to no growth he has few options. This week he tried one time-honored approach — jawboning.

Words are cheap but they carry a lot of weight when spoken by the most powerful central banker in the world. More than once he reiterated that the Fed's priorities have changed. Inflation, he clearly stated, has become public enemy No. 1. As expected, his mere threat to combat inflation immediately started things rolling in the way he wanted. 

The dollar had one of his strongest weeks in months, gold retreated back to the $850 an ounce level and interest rates began to climb. Even the oil price hesitated in its rise to the moon.

May's Consumer Price Index gained 0.6 percent versus 0.2 percent last month and was the largest rise in six months. It simply underscored the inflation threat that is obvious to you and I but until now had seemingly escaped the government's notice.

Yet, because the number was not as bad as many feared, the market moved up on the news (go figure). At the same time retail sales for last month rose an unexpected 1 percent which kind of contradicts economist's forecasts of a slowing economy. Of course, the government's stimulus checks began arriving at the same time so May could have been a one-off event in a declining retail sector. Given the unknowns, the stock markets performed in schizophrenic fashion, closing down on the week.

In the meantime, the bond market had a similar game going. Traders who usually make bets on future Fed fund rate moves have priced in a 67 percent chance that the Fed will raise rates a quarter point in August and a 97 percent chance they will raise rates no later than September. If the Federal Reserve does raise interest rates the hoped-for impact would be to cap commodity prices and at the same time boost the dollar. That would be a good thing. 


However, raising rates would not be good for a number of sectors of the economy with housing and consumer lending two of the more obvious victims. There is also a chance that rising rates would tip the economy backward and take a lot of shaky lenders and borrowers along with it. Given that U.S. foreclosures jumped 48 percent in May from a year ago (one in every 483 households), that is a real threat.

So in the short term, Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke and his Board Governors are out on the stump trying to talk up the dollar. Whispers of possible coordinated central bank intervention to bolster the greenback are rampant and the magic is working so far. Of course, as with all verbal communications, at some point words must be backed by action. But right now, it provides a tiny bit of space between a rock and a hard place.

As for the markets, energy continues to call the shots: oil up, market down and vice versa. The S&P 500 is in no man's land but the technical picture is not good. The S&P finished flat for the week at 1360 while the NASDAQ (2454) was down and the Dow (12,307) up slightly. Volatility has moved up again.

Although the S&P index has some support at 1325 a failure to hold there would indicate further downside to th1250 area or so, and that my dear reader would be a decline of 6 to 7 percent. So don't be a hero because it's no time to be aggressive.

Bill Schmick is a licensed investment adviser representative and portfolio strategist with Berkshire-based Dion Money Management, managing over $800 million for middle-class Americans from coast to coast. Direct your inquiries to Bill at 1-877-850-7942, Ext. 146 (toll free) or wschmick@dionmm.com.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Pittsfield School Committee to Again Vote on PHS Report Release

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The School Committee will again discuss releasing a redacted version of the PHS report after confusion over a March vote. 

On Wednesday, member Ciara Batory, who has been vocal about releasing last year’s investigation into allegations of staff misconduct at Pittsfield High School, demanded a date for its release to the public.  It was indicated that the item can be put on the next meeting's agenda. 

"I am done playing the game. The public wants a date of when the redacted PHS report will be released, and I will not stop until I get a date," she said before a five-minute recess was called on the meeting. 

Last school year, five past and present PHS staff members were investigated for alleged misconduct, and allegations were found to be "unsupported," according to executive summaries released by the last term's committee. 

The School Committee agenda for its March 25 meeting included a "request by Ciara Batory to release the May 2025 Pittsfield High report with required redactions." It was reported that there were threats of legal action if the redacted report were released. 

Batory on Wednesday said she did not request that agenda item, and that the motion had already passed. Mayor Peter Marchetti, also chair, said they voted in January to review the redacted version, not to release it. 

Batory played the motion that passed in January from her phone: 

"I move the committee vote to release a PHS investigation report in a redacted form by February 18, 2026, and I'd like to add to that the School Committee reviews it before its release to the public, to make sure that there is enough to present to the public."

View Full Story

More Stories