The March CPI data, a key indicator of inflation, revealed a persistent issue. The consumer price index surged by 3.5% in March, surpassing expectations and indicating that inflation remains stubbornly above the U.S. Central Bank's 2% target. This significant increase was primarily driven by housing and energy costs, with energy rising by 1.1% and shelter by 0.4%. The core CPI, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, also saw a substantial rise of 0.4%, exceeding consensus estimates. These figures, higher than anticipated, led many market participants to revise their rate cut forecasts from three to two in 2024, underscoring the potential impact of these data on the market.
The March Producer Price Index (PPI), a measure of wholesale inflation, came in cooler than expectations with a 0.2% increase. March PPI data and the CPI figures provided conflicting signals about inflation. The markets are now eagerly awaiting the Fed’s favorite inflation gauge, the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) index, which will be released in late April. The CPI and PPI data will play a crucial role in the Fed's decision-making process regarding interest rates, which will impact the markets.
Meanwhile, several critical historical inflation barometers are screaming that the economic condition remains a clear and present danger. Government spending and policies have increased the indicator’s prices over the past weeks and months.
The geopolitical landscape has not helped the situation as the Ukraine war continues and the Middle East conflict has escalated.
Crude Oil- A leading inflation barometer is bullish and could become volatile
The path of gold and silver prices indicates inflation
Base metals- Sanctions on Russian metals lit a bullish inflationary fuse
Other commodities at or near record highs
The 2% target is unrealistic- Rates may need to increase
The Fed’s 2% inflation target has become challenging as prices remain high, economic growth is robust, and the employment picture is strong. If the Fed plans to lower rates, it must adjust its target or ignore the benchmark it has touted for years.
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