U.S. CPI Inflation Measure Dropping?
2022.11.07 20:24
The most important economic this week is Thursday’s report.
Last Friday’s October report showed continued cooling in “”.
Bespoke Wage Report
What’s interesting about the Bespoke graph is that the blue line shows 2018 – 2019 compare. That surprised me.
However, here is the Bespoke table on inflation that really caught my eye:
Bespoke CPI Inflation Oct22
The bar at the top shows CPI decelerating (or disinflating) although still way too high. Peak CPI was in June 2022 at 9.06% per the bar chart in the top half of the page.
More interesting was that it was noted that inflation needs to come in below +0.4% rate in order to get CPI inflation back into the 3% – 5% range.
The Thursday report is expecting CPI to print +0.5% to +0.6%, according to the Briefing.com table at the top of the page.
Conclusion
Expectations coming into Thursday’s CPI and print are leaning “heavy” so to speak, meaning the street is expecting another hot number. Also listening to bond fund managers and the cacophony of opinions permeated every day in financial media, it may not be until next summer that we resolve this inflation issue.
The various bond asset classes in the US and Non-US were slightly lower this past week, even though the Fed boosted the fed funds rate to a mid-range of 3.875%.
Inflation matters to bond yields and bond yields matter to stock PE levels and valuations. It’s all starting with the inflation data.
From a trading perspective, this past week was interesting: the dollar started to fall, which seemingly caused gold to rally and you had a good rally across Europe and China. Rumors of a Chine re-opening started late in the week on what looked like a completely tepid comment by Xi.
The VanEck Emerging Markets Fund as well as the and , while the (emerging markets ex-China rose 2.1% this past week, so you can get a quick fell for how much was China and how much was the dollar. If China commits vocally to reopening, and the dollar, we could see a powerful in non-US assets.
The 15-year annualized returns (per Morningstar data as of September 30) for the VWO and EEM are +0.40% and -0.33% bp’s respectively.
Those aren’t typos.
Take everything here with skepticism and a healthy grain of salt. Past performance is no guarantee of future results and none of this is a recommendation to buy, sell or hold anything. Writing about all of this imposes a discipline to stay on top of and track the data.