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Markets surge on despite hotter-than-expected U.S. inflation

7 min read

Markets rolled on to fresh highs despite US inflation figures coming in hotter than expected

 

Inflation Surprises to the Upside, Markets Rally Anyway

U.S. CPI inflation was hotter than expected, with the so-called “core” and “supercore” measures showing a particular stubbornness, underscoring the slowing/stalling disinflation that will keep the Federal Reserve (Fed) cautious for longer than maybe the market thinks.

The market seemed to ignore the data; bulls rode over it completely, sending the S&P 500 index up more than 1% for a fresh closing high. European stock markets also rallied in the wake of the inflation report with Frankfurt’s DAX index notching a new record high and the FTSE 100 finally breaking free from its 7,700 straitjacket to hit its best since May 2023.

Treasury yields didn’t budge that much and expectations for a June cut stay at about 66%, May down to 14% from 52% a month ago though — tjos shows traders don’t think the Fed is rushing to the exits. That said, the 10-year yield is up around 4.15% now after flirting with 4.05% on Monday.

 

 

Correlation Between Gold and Bitcoin Giving Way?

Gold, which has been unusually buoyant of late, sold off sharply – a huge increase in net long speculative positions since late February may be about to be unwound. Stocks in Europe were a bit higher again on Wednesday morning, with the FTSE up a smidge as GDP data shows the UK returned to growth in January.

Tokyo was down as wage negotiations in Japan concluded with the biggest pay rises in 25 years. U.S. futures are flat. Bitcoin rose to a fresh high above $73,600… Is Gold/BTC breaking down again? More on debt debasement below.

 

Cuts Getting Farther Away?

I just feel inflation is starting to feel too sticky. If it keeps up like this, then you can kiss goodbye to a June rate cut and we start to question whether the Fed will be able to deliver cuts at all given how loose financial conditions are. The issue was always that inflation would reaccelerate if the Federal Reserve eased off too soon and that is exactly what it did with the December dovish pivot – the economy was not ready.

It will require more labour market weakness to secure the inflation victory. Inflation stopped going down months ago and is now anchored at a level that is materially higher than it was before the Pandemic Great Monetary Inflation — this is entirely what we expected.

I have stressed time and again that inflation is now structurally higher, and central banks would eventually need to ditch their 2% targets. Now we really test Jay Powell’s mettle.

Keep repeating it – financial conditions have been getting looser since October 2022 despite the hikes.

loose financial conditions

 

More on Inflation

Headline CPI rose by 3.2% YoY last month. Core CPI was still a very stubborn 3.8% YoY, from 3.9% YoY in January, while the “supercore” inflation measure remained unchanged at 4.3% YoY.

On a 3-month annualized basis, CPI core services ex-housing (“supercore”) increased by 6.9% in February, but month-on-month it was down from 0.87% in Jan to 0.47% in February. There had been some fear that this would bump again so this may explain the market’s sangfroid. Imagine trading to figure all this out – no wonder bulls just said “screw it, we’re buying this.”

The services component is a problem .

more inflation

Goldman Sachs notes that while the CPI ran hot, the composition “was disinflationary,” going on to add:

“[...] With a sharp normalization in non-housing services inflation and a return to the Q4 trend for the owners’ equivalent rent category. We also expect the rise in used car prices to more than reverse this spring. We continue to expect the FOMC to leave the Fed funds rate unchanged at the March meeting and to begin the easing cycle in June.” 

US growing debt

 

Reckless Spending?

We talked earlier this week about the "debt debasement” trade powering equities, bitcoin and gold to records.

So, Monday saw President Biden unveil his $7.3tn budget proposal. It involves $5.5tn in tax hikes, spends $300 billion more in the 2025 fiscal year than the previous year, and purports to cut the Federal deficit by $3 trillion over ten years. No one thinks it will pass Congress, so it’s not exactly been top of the agenda for traders.

But it underlines the predicament facing the U.S.: ever-increasing debts and deficits. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) estimates indicate that U.S. national debt would rise to $45.1 trillion — or 105.6% of GDP — by 2034 under the plan, up from $27.4 trillion.

Here’s an analysis of the proposal from the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget:

  • Debt would approach but not breach its previous record as a share of the economy, growing to a high of 106 per cent of GDP by 2030 and stabilizing around that level. In nominal dollars, debt would grow by $17.7 trillion, from $27.4 trillion today to $45.1 trillion by the end of 2034.
  • Deficits would total $16.3 trillion (4.6 per cent of GDP) between FY 2025 and 2034, reaching $1.7 trillion (3.9 per cent of GDP) in 2034.
  • Spending and revenue would average 24.4 and 19.7 per cent of GDP, respectively, over the next decade, with spending totalling 24.2 per cent of GDP and revenue 20.3 per cent of GDP in 2034. The 50-year historical average is 21.0 per cent of GDP for spending and 17.3 per cent for revenue.
  • The proposals in the President’s budget would reduce projected deficits by $3.3 trillion on net through 2034, including $3.2 trillion of new spending and tax breaks, $5.2 trillion of revenue increases, over $900 billion of spending reductions, and nearly $400 billion of net interest savings.
  • The budget irresponsibly punts on tax cut extensions and Social Security solvency by calling to extend expiring tax cuts for those earning below $400,000 with offsets and extend Social Security solvency but failing to specify the policies to accomplish these goals or incorporate the cost of the extensions.
  • The budget assumes strong economic growth and stable inflation, with assumptions in line with consensus over the next few years but somewhat more optimistic later in the decade. The budget assumes real GDP growth of 2.1 per cent per year, compared to CBO’s 2.0 per cent projection. It assumes the ten-year Treasury yield to average 3.8 per cent, compared to CBO’s 4.0 per cent.

 
The President’s budget encouragingly pays for new initiatives and reduces deficits. However, it falls short of proposing the necessary deficit reduction that is needed to put the nation on a sustainable fiscal path and fails to recognize the immense cost of extending expiring tax provisions. It includes important measures to improve Medicare solvency and sustainability but fails to say how it would avoid Social Security insolvency. Still, the proposed $3.3 trillion of net deficit reduction would represent an important step toward long-term fiscal sustainability.

We took a closer look at budget deficits — and if they matter — in the latest edition of Finalto’s podcast, Overleveraged.

 

joe biden nyse

 


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