The Fed is the mortal enemy of the young generations, and thus of the nation itself.

"The wealth effect" generated by rising stock and housing prices has long been a core goal of the Federal Reserve and other central banks. As Lance Roberts noted in his recent commentary So, The Fed Doesn't Target The Market, Eh?[1](Zero Hedge), Ben Bernanke added a “third mandate” to the Fed – the creation of the “wealth effect"--in 2010, the reasoning being that higher asset prices "will boost consumer wealth and help increase confidence" which will then lead to higher spending and all the wonderfulness of endless economic expansion.
But as Chris Hamilton explains in his recent essay Economic Doom Loop Well Underway[2], "the wealth effect" has enriched the already rich at the expense of the young who didn't get the opportunity to buy the assets the Fed has pushed to the moon at pre-bubble prices. That privilege was largely reserved for those who bought a decade or two ago, before the Fed made boosting asset prices the implicit goal of all its policies.

Take a look at the chart of household net worth below. Household worth has soared from around $40 trillion in 2000 to $100 trillion in 2018--a gain of $60 trillion while the economy grew at a much more modest pace. Household net worth has leaped from $55 trillion in 2010 to $100 trillion in 2018--$45 trillion in gains for those who already owned stocks and houses.

As Chris observed,"non-discretionary items like homes, rent, education, healthcare, insurance, childcare, etc. are skyrocketing versus wages." This is visible in the second chart of wage growth, which has hobbled along at 2% or 3% while stocks and housing have doubled or...

Read more from our friends at Gold & Silver