I normally hate the comments about the difference between Main Street and Wall Street. Usually, it is a false dichotomy, but the current environment suggests that the average consumer or wage-earner is having a harder time than wealth-holders. This is what happens when we are in a more inflationary environment. Yes, inflation is off its highs, but the average inflation for this century is closer to 4% than the 2% Fed target.
The labor markets are looking weak and confidence is weak, yet the stock market is higher based on strong earnings from those economies that have network effects and represent the tech industry. Two-income households may be doing well, but the rest of the country is trying to hang on and deal with recurring price increases that do not appear in the CPI indexes.
A strong stock market may pull the economy higher, but that is unlikely. The higher stock market is likely the result of too much money chasing existing assets. The good markets may not be seeing all of the inflation, but the financial markets are seeing "asset inflation.






