The US Federal Reserve raised interest rates again this month by 25 basis points, bringing it to a range between 5% and 5.25%. The widely-anticipated hike marked the tenth time the Fed has moved rates upward since March 2022, as part of its aggressive campaign to tame inflation. And while the Fed appears to be succeeding, the ripple effects have brought pain to the banking sector. Rising rates crippled the portfolios of Silicon Valley, Signature and other banks holding long term securities. Still, regulators and lawmakers have said the worst is over in this banking crisis. DICK BOVE, chief financial officer at ODEON CAPITAL CONVERSATIONS, nevertheless, repeats his warning, now with more urgency, that more bank failures are coming. "This was a systemic problem which has not been corrected and, therefore, the crisis continues," BOVE sas. "There will be more bank failures. And it will be significant." Joining the CONVERSATION, our host, JOHN AIDAN BYRNE, citing a new poll, says nearly 50 percent of Americans now worry that their bank deposits are not safe.
Elsewhere, the CONVERSATIONS takes a closer look at the latest jobs and unemployment data. Despite a dip in the US unemployment rate to 3.4 percent, mass layoffs continue, job openings have contracted significantly across multiple sectors, productivity is declining and wages have flattened out. "The trend line is saying the job market will weaken, and unemployment is going to increase," BOVE says. "We're going to have an economic problem." The CONVERSATION will also look at the latest challenges for the US dollar as a global reserve currency.