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 | Jun 27, 2022 01:08AM ET

Can you make sense of this?

Two weeks ago, the markets experienced a brutal sell-off (S&P 500 down -6.1%) due to inflation rhetoric, rising gas prices, 75 bp Fed Funds rise, and the fastest acceleration of the 10-year US Treasury in history.

Last week the S&P 500 jumped 6.7% and recovered all of the prior week's losses.

It appears as if all the bear market narratives have all but disappeared. The 10-year interest rates dropped back down to close to 3.0% (from 3.25% the week before), oil fell over 5% (from $120 to $113), and the major banks (JPM) insinuated that we may dodge a recession. The stock market liked this commentary.

Did things change that fast? Did all the world's problems go away?

We don't think so.

While the inflation story may have temporarily peaked, it is far from over.

If you look back to the 70's when we last experienced this type of out-of-control inflation, it took several years and significant interest rate hikes to get it under control.

Inflation peaked at 12%, gasoline was in short supply, interest rates peaked at 16%, and stagflation plagued the economy for almost 10 years (1973 to 1982).

It is nearly impossible to believe that inflation has subsided in any meaningful way.

As we have written before, inflation is punishing and insidious. It lasts far longer than anyone expects. In fact, as Mish has pointed out on numerous shows this week, inflation, and especially stagflation, will be around for many months, if not years.

See her explain the severity of the situation in a few of her national media appearances from Friday below.

: Market Wrap Up for a Wild Week

Fox News with Neil Cavuto : With So Many Current Events- What Will the Market Do?

UBS Wealth Management : Volatility and Uncertainty Continue

Friday's fierce rally was nothing more than a short-term reprieve.

Coincidentally, rallies like Friday's are even more likely at the end of a quarter because this is when Wall Street and the investment community are rebalancing and repositioning their portfolios.

It's in Wall Street's best interest to drive prices up near the end of the quarter to take advantage of fee billing which is based on balances on June 30.

h2 The Inflation Problems Persist/h2

Friday, oil prices (and oil-related stocks) were back up a few dollars and the world began talking, yet again, about the energy supply constraints in Europe that would likely spill over to the US.

In the past month, we've seen oil spike to a high of $124 a barrel, come down to $107 and end the week at $113. Gasoline still hovers around $5.00 a gallon nationally. The precious commodity remains volatile and has a short-term impact on interest rates and the broad stock market. (See oil chart from this week below).

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