Fed President John Williams uses the analogy of an onion when describing inflation. For example, the outer most layer consists of commodities. The middle layers consists of goods. However, the inner most layer – its core – consists of services. And it’s services inflation which generates inflation inertia. And that’s the mechanic which the Fed are exclusively focused on…
December CPI – The Good and the Bad
There was a little of something for the bulls and the bears with December’s monthly inflation report. On the surface, inflation is coming down. However, if we look underneath the hood, most of that inflation is goods. Services inflation however remains doggedly high (i.e. wages). And whilst goods inflation could fall to “zero” – if services inflation remains twice the Fed’s 2.0% objective – they will continue to tighten (even if that means simply holding rates at a higher level)
Fed Gets Green Light… Market Thinks Otherwise
The market ripped higher on news of a softer-than-expected wage inflation report. But haven’t we seen this script before? Markets have a recent history of front-running the Fed… only to be bitterly disappointed. From my lens, nothing in this print changes the script for the Fed. And markets are not set up to hear that…
5 Charts to Shape 2023
Inflation, rate hikes, the US dollar and bond yields all shaped how things traded in 2022. What will shape investment strategies and sentiment this year? From mine, look no further than what we see with employment, wage inflation and economic growth. And from there – how this dictates the pace and duration of Fed tightening.
For a full list of posts from 2017…