What is the CPI Rate for 2022
Powell's
optimism about the Fed's ability to bring inflation back under control -
beware - without hurting the economy and corporate earnings,
contributed to a good rebound on Wall Street, with the S&P 500
rarely recovering 0.92% and the Nasdaq 100 even better (+ 1.47%).
Treasury yields, consistent with this optimism, fell across the curve,
albeit slightly. A commendable act of trust, if you think that the FED
President is the same one who 8/9 months ago said that inflation was
transitory, while in the second half of the year the CPI made the record
since the 80s. the Fed Funds to zero and the Fed engaged in QE for a
couple of months.
To
think that the stance needed to bring inflation under control will not
have any consequences on the cycle seems risky to me. Of course, it may
be that, after the frenzied stimulus phase and the production
bottlenecks have passed, the structural disinflationary forces reaffirm
themselves, and the CPI re-enters largely autonomously. This appears to
be the market's view, judging by bond levels. But this mean revertion
has been insisting for a while, and in the meantime we are at 7%. Let's
say that the concept of risk premium at the moment does not seem very
popular among investors, ousted by more recent acronyms such as TINA
(there is no alternative), FOMO (fear of missing out) and BTFD (buy the
fucking dip).
Asia
welcomed the turnaround in sentiment very well. All major indices
except Jakarta (at the stake) show robust progress, with Chinese "H"
shares leading, along with Hong Kong, with gains close to 3%. Third
place, Tokyo, followed by Seoul and Vietnam, with the Chinese "A" shares
showing more limited but still good progress. The soul of the rise in
"H" shares is the tech, those stocks like Ali Baba also listed on Wall
Street that were harassed by regulation and the risk of delisting in
late 2021, and are now violently squeezed.
The
good sentiment that prevailed among Chinese assets is presumably also
due to the December CPI which dropped from 2.3% to 1.5% vs expectations
for 1.7%. Producer prices also slowed (10.3% from 12.95 and vs
expectations for 11.3%). The reasoning is always the same: falling
inflation ergo more room for maneuver for the PBOC in the direction of
easing. This places the Chinese central bank in direct antithesis to the
other major banks. Won't this divergence fuel capital flight in the
long run? And then, what will be the effect on prices of an increase in
omicron lockdowns?
Apart
from that, a lot of Chinese real estate debt is due to maturity shortly
and a lot of spectacle is expected. Reuters reports that unpaid
commercial papers are flying. Their assets continue to suffer a lot.
On
the Covid front, a certain optimism is fueled by the fact that in the
UK cases are starting to decline, while hospitalizations and musts have
not risen that much. The UK's role as "sentinel of industrialized
countries" on Covid bodes well.
Good
news, certainly that it increases the probability that the bulk of the
countries will see the peak of the wave in January. From the point of
view of the markets, support for sentiment? It may be, but in reality
Omicron's "dip" was recovered quickly, and a variable such as oil has
already returned above the prevailing level before its appearance.
The
European opening saw, once again, continental equities catch up with
the Wall Street rally last night. After that, in the absence of any
relevant data, markets waited nervously for the US CPI due out this
afternoon. The same goes for the currency and the yields.
At 2.30 pm, the show.
The
numbers are not too far from the consensus (matched in the case of the
year-over-year headline data) but have all the characteristics to cause
headlines in the media, with 7 as the first digit, and 5.5% and
historical records.
It
has been observed that a large contribution to strength comes from used
cars, while housing, which is the largest component of the core data,
has slowed the ride slightly. And then there is energy which has a very
strong effect on the year-over-year data, even if the month-over-month
contribution was negative. Too bad that oil is making new highs for the
period today.
The
market reaction is similar to that seen yesterday after Powell, and on
other recent occasions in which the numbers were relevant, but expected
and therefore discounted in the short term. Of course, from the point of
view of the fundamentals it is so counterintuitive that it makes the
desire to comment go away. In fact, in the face of a level of inflation
at its highest for decades, and with the Fed clearly lagging behind,
what do we have? Dollar and yields are falling, and stocks and
commodities are rising. Obviously it is not the case to focus on the
single session. But, as mentioned above, the risk associated with
inflation entering 2022 at this level is not negligible. What if, once
again, the return expectations turn out to be wrong? Especially since a
wave of Omicron in China could further exacerbate supply difficulties in
the coming months. Incidentally, in November there are Mid Term
Elections in Congress, and Democrats are already panicking about price
levels. Bet that if the CPI does not slow down quickly, the pressures on
the FOMC will become high (or worse, we are talking about price
controls, which are detrimental to margins).
The
opposite reasoning is: if 7% inflation has not undermined expectations,
and made meatballs of the rate curve, what can it do? What prevents us
from continuing like this, with real Fed Funds negative by handfuls of
percentage points, the best of all possible worlds for Corporate USA?
I
don't know, but experience shows that if something sounds too good to
be true, it usually isn't. Before Covid, a certain school claimed that
one could make a fiscal deficit at will without fear of creating
inflation, which was now dead. At this point I would say that we have
proof to the contrary.
European
equities were happy to take advantage of the US reaction, closing with
good progress. Naturally, the correction of the Dollar resulted in a
strengthening of the €, while the Eurozone yields fell in sympathy with
the US ones. The spread is also down. The strength of commodities was
spectacular, with copper up by 3%, oil by 2% and even precious metals
up. A movement, that of industrial metals and energy that underlies a
strong economy. On what basis, then, will prices slow down, with strong
commodities and a resilient cycle? Posterity will judge.