Rising Rates Are Baked In The Market’s Psyche
The latest May consumer price index was hotter than expected, with an 8.6% rise from May 2021. Core inflation, excluding food and energy, rose by a more than expected 6%. Meanwhile, the producer price index posted another double-digit increase, coming in at 10.8% in May.
Economists favor using the core number when making monetary policy decisions, but core CPI may be stale in mid-2022. Food and fuel make up a significant percentage of consumers’ budgets.
Energy and food prices have exploded on the back of the shift in US energy policy and the war in Ukraine, two supply-side economic events. Gasoline at over $5 and grain and oilseed prices at the highest levels since drought-ridden 2012 have a knock-on economic impact.
Last week, the US Federal Reserve hiked the short-term Fed Funds Rate by 75 basis points to 1.50% to 1.75% after the European Central Bank said it was ready for liftoff from years of negative interest rates. However, inflation levels will keep real rates in the US and Europe far below zero as inflation continues to erode money’s value. The US bond market has been in a bearish trend for the better part of a year, and higher rates are weighing on the stock market, with all the leading indices in negative territory in 2022. Meanwhile, the energy and food companies have bucked the market’s trend, posting substantial gains. The trend in interest rates is higher, but it is baked into the market’s psyche in June 2022.
The Fed cannot move too fast
The mid-term elections are on the horizon
The central banks are far behind the inflationary curve
The Fed and ECB do not have the answers to the current issues facing the economy
Expect more market volatility for at least four reasons
Thanks for reading, and stay tuned for the next edition of the Tradier Rundown!