Tag Archives: Inflation Figures/Price Indices

Bank of England Further Expands Bond-Market Rescue to Restore U.K.’s Financial Stability

LONDON—The Bank of England extended support targeted at pension funds for the second day in a row, the latest attempt to contain a bond-market selloff that has threatened U.K. financial stability.

The central bank on Tuesday said it would add inflation-linked government bonds to its program of long-dated bond purchases, after an attempt on Monday to help pension funds failed to calm markets.

“Dysfunction in this market, and the prospect of self-reinforcing ‘fire sale’ dynamics pose a material risk to U.K. financial stability,” the BOE said.

The yield on a 30-year U.K. inflation-linked bond has soared above 1.5% this week, up from 0.851% on Oct. 7, according to

Tradeweb.

Just weeks ago, the yield on the gilt, as U.K. government bonds are known, was negative. Because yields rise as prices fall, the effect has been punishing losses for bond investors.

Turmoil in the U.K. bond market created a feedback loop that left investors like pension funds short on cash and rippled out into other markets. WSJ’s Chelsey Dulaney explains the type of investment at the heart of the crisis. Illustration: Ryan Trefes

On Tuesday, after the BOE expanded the purchases, the yield on inflation-linked gilts held mostly steady but at the new, elevated levels. The central bank said it bought roughly £2 billion, equivalent to about $2.21 billion, in inflation-linked gilts, out of a £5 billion daily capacity.

The bank’s bond purchases, however, are meant to run out on Friday. The Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association, a trade body that represents the pension industry, urged the central bank on Tuesday to extend its purchases until the end of the month.

The near-daily expansion of the Bank of England’s rescue plan highlighted the challenges facing central banks in stamping out problems fueled by a once-in-a-generation increase in inflation and interest rates. It also raised questions about whether the BOE was providing the right medicine to address the problem.

The turmoil sparked fresh demands on Monday for pension funds to come up with cash to shore up LDIs, or liability-driven investments, derivative-based strategies that were meant to help match the money they owe to retirees over the long term.

LDIs were at the root of the bond selloff that prompted the BOE’s original intervention. Pension plans in late September saw a wave of margin calls after Prime Minister

Liz Truss’s

government announced large, debt-funded tax cuts that fueled an unprecedented bond-market selloff.

The BOE launched its original bond-purchase program on Sept. 28, but it only restored calm for a couple of days before selling resumed. An expansion of the program on Monday backfired, with yields again soaring higher.

The selloff on Monday was “very reminiscent of two weeks ago,” said

Simeon Willis,

chief investment officer of XPS, a company that advises pension plans.

LDI strategies use leveraged financial derivatives tied to interest rates to amplify returns. The outsize moves in U.K. bond markets last month led to huge collateral calls on pensions to back up the leveraged investments. The pension funds have sold other assets, including government and corporate bonds, to meet those calls, adding to pressure on yields to rise and creating a spiral effect on markets.

Pensions are typically big holders of inflation-linked government bonds, which help protect the plans from both inflation and interest-rate changes. But these weren’t eligible in the BOE’s bond-buying program until Tuesday.

The U.K. helped pioneer bonds with payouts linked to inflation, sometimes referred to as linkers, in the 1980s. Linkers were originally sold exclusively to pensions, but the U.K. opened them to other investors over the years.

Pensions remain a dominant force in the market because the bonds offer long-term protection against both inflation and interest-rate changes. Their outsize role left the market vulnerable to shifts in pension-fund demand like that seen in recent weeks.

Adam Skerry, a fund manager at Abrdn with a focus on inflation-linked government bonds, said his firm has struggled to trade those assets in recent days.

“We were trying to sell some bonds this morning, and it was virtually impossible to do that,” he said. “The LDI issue that’s facing the market, the fact that the market is moving to the degree that it did, particularly yesterday, suggests that there’s still an awful lot [of selling] there.”

Pensions have also appeared hesitant to sell their bonds to the BOE, reflecting a mismatch in what the central bank is offering and what the market needs.

“The way that the bank has structured this intervention is they can only buy assets if people put offers into them, but nobody is putting offers in,” said Craig Inches, head of rates and cash at Royal London Asset Management. He said the pension funds would rather sell their riskier assets, including corporate bonds or property.

Mr. Willis of XPS said many pensions want to hold on to their government bonds because it helps protect pensions against changes in interest rates, which impact the way their liabilities are valued.

“If they sell gilts now, they’re doing it in the likelihood that they’ll need to buy them back in the future at some point and they might be more expensive, and that’s unhelpful,” he said.

Also plaguing the program: Pension funds are traditionally slow-moving organizations that make decisions with multidecade horizons. The market turmoil has hurtled them into the warp-speed-style moves usually reserved for traders at swashbuckling hedge funds.

To make decisions about the sale of assets, industry players describe a game of telephone playing out among trustees, investment advisers, fund managers and banks. Pension funds spread their assets among multiple managers, which are in turn held by separate custodian banks. Calling everyone for the necessary signoffs is creating a lengthy and involved process.

To give themselves more time, pension funds are pushing the BOE to extend the bond-buying program at least to the end of the month. That is when the U.K.’s Treasury chief,

Kwasi Kwarteng,

is expected to lay out the government’s borrowing plans for the coming year.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies, a nonpartisan think tank that focuses on the budget, warned Tuesday that borrowing is likely to hit £200 billion in the financial year ending March, the third highest for a fiscal year since World War II and £100 billion higher than planned in March of this year. Increased borrowing increases the supply of bonds and generally causes bond yields to rise.

Mr. Kwarteng on Tuesday declared his confidence in BOE Gov. Andrew Bailey as he faced questions from lawmakers for the first time in his new job.

“I speak to the governor very frequently and he is someone who is absolutely independent and is managing what is a global situation very effectively,” he said.

Write to Chelsey Dulaney at Chelsey.Dulaney@wsj.com, Anna Hirtenstein at anna.hirtenstein@wsj.com and Paul Hannon at paul.hannon@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Read original article here

Can the Fed tame inflation without further crushing the stock market? What’s next for investors.

The Federal Reserve isn’t trying to slam the stock market as it rapidly raises interest rates in its bid to slow inflation still running red hot — but investors need to be prepared for more pain and volatility because policy makers aren’t going to be cowed by a deepening selloff, investors and strategists said.

“I don’t think they’re necessarily trying to drive inflation down by destroying stock prices or bond prices, but it is having that effect.” said Tim Courtney, chief investment officer at Exencial Wealth Advisors, in an interview.

U.S. stocks fell sharply in the past week after hopes for a pronounced cooling in inflation were dashed by a hotter-than-expected August inflation reading. The data cemented expectations among fed-funds futures traders for a rate hike of at least 75 basis points when the Fed concludes its policy meeting on Sept. 21, with some traders and analysts looking for an increase of 100 basis points, or a full percentage point.

Preview: The Fed is ready to tell us how much ‘pain’ the economy will suffer. It still won’t hint at recession though.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
-0.45%
logged a 4.1% weekly fall, while the S&P 500
SPX,
-0.72%
dropped 4.8% and the Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
-0.90%
suffered a 5.5% decline. The S&P 500 ended Friday below the 3,900 level viewed as an important area of technical support, with some chart watchers eyeing the potential for a test of the large-cap benchmark’s 2022 low at 3,666.77 set on June 16.

See: Stock-market bears seen keeping upper hand as S&P 500 drops below 3,900

A profit warning from global shipping giant and economic bellwether FedEx Corp.
FDX,
-21.40%
further stoked recession fears, contributing to stock-market losses on Friday.

Read: Why FedEx’s stock plunge is so bad for the whole stock market

Treasurys also fell, with yield on the 2-year Treasury note
TMUBMUSD02Y,
3.867%
soaring to a nearly 15-year high above 3.85% on expectations the Fed will continue pushing rates higher in coming months. Yields rise as prices fall.

Investors are operating in an environment where the central bank’s need to rein in stubborn inflation is widely seen having eliminated the notion of a figurative “Fed put” on the stock market.

The concept of a Fed put has been around since at least the October 1987 stock-market crash prompted the Alan Greenspan-led central bank to lower interest rates. An actual put option is a financial derivative that gives the holder the right but not the obligation to sell the underlying asset at a set level, known as the strike price, serving as an insurance policy against a market decline.

Some economists and analysts have even suggested the Fed should welcome or even aim for market losses, which could serve to tighten financial conditions as investors scale back spending.

Related: Do higher stock prices make it harder for the Fed to fight inflation? The short answer is ‘yes’

William Dudley, the former president of the New York Fed, argued earlier this year that the central bank won’t get a handle on inflation that’s running near a 40-year high unless they make investors suffer. “It’s hard to know how much the Federal Reserve will need to do to get inflation under control,” wrote Dudley in a Bloomberg column in April. “But one thing is certain: to be effective, it’ll have to inflict more losses on stock and bond investors than it has so far.”

Some market participants aren’t convinced. Aoifinn Devitt, chief investment officer at Moneta, said the Fed likely sees stock-market volatility as a byproduct of its efforts to tighten monetary policy, not an objective.

“They recognize that stocks can be collateral damage in a tightening cycle,” but that doesn’t mean that stocks “have to collapse,” Devitt said.

The Fed, however, is prepared to tolerate seeing markets decline and the economy slow and even tip into recession as it focuses on taming inflation, she said.

Recent: Fed’s Powell says bringing down inflation will cause pain to households and businesses in Jackson Hole speech

The Federal Reserve held the fed funds target rate at a range of 0% to 0.25% between 2008 and 2015, as it dealt with the financial crisis and its aftermath. The Fed also cut rates to near zero again in March 2020 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. With a rock-bottom interest rate, the Dow
DJIA,
-0.45%
skyrocketed over 40%, while the large-cap index S&P 500
SPX,
-0.72%
jumped over 60% between March 2020 and December 2021, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

Investors got used to “the tailwind for over a decade with falling interest rates” while looking for the Fed to step in with its “put” should the going get rocky, said Courtney at Exencial Wealth Advisors.

“I think (now) the Fed message is ‘you’re not gonna get this tailwind anymore’,” Courtney told MarketWatch on Thursday. “I think markets can grow, but they’re gonna have to grow on their own because the markets are like a greenhouse where the temperatures have to be kept at a certain level all day and all night, and I think that’s the message that markets can and should grow on their own without the greenhouse effect.”

See: Opinion: The stock market’s trend is relentlessly bearish, especially after this week’s big daily declines

Meanwhile, the Fed’s aggressive stance means investors should be prepared for what may be a “few more daily stabs downward” that could eventually prove to be a “final big flush,” said Liz Young, head of investment strategy at SoFi, in a Thursday note.

“This may sound odd, but if that happens swiftly, meaning within the next couple months, that actually becomes the bull case in my view,” she said. “It could be a quick and painful drop, resulting in a renewed move higher later in the year that’s more durable, as inflation falls more notably.”

Read original article here

Stocks Waver After Suffering Worst Day Since June 2020

U.S. stocks wobbled between small gains and losses Wednesday, coming off a wild day of trading spurred by a stronger-than-expected inflation report.

The S&P 500 dropped 0.1%, a day after the benchmark index plummeted 4.3% in its worst selloff since June 2020. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.3%, while the tech-focused Nasdaq Composite gained 0.1%.

The release of U.S. inflation data for August on Tuesday spurred volatile moves across asset classes. The consumer-price reading showed the core inflation index, which excludes volatile energy and food figures, increased last month from a year earlier—indicating that broad price pressures strengthened.

The hot inflation report curbed investors’ hopes the Federal Reserve might slow its aggressive pace of interest-rate increases. That led traders on Tuesday to dump stocks across all sectors, sell bonds and cryptocurrencies, and push the U.S. dollar higher.

On Wednesday, markets seemed to take data measuring U.S. suppliers’ prices in stride. The producer-price index, which measures what suppliers are charging businesses and other customers, declined 0.1% from the month before, in line with economist expectations.

“We witnessed violent moves in the market yesterday as we reprice Fed and economic risk expectations,” said

Megan Horneman,

chief investment officer at Verdence Capital Advisors. “Today we’re absorbing such a destructive day.”

The latest U.S. inflation data curbed investors’ hopes the Federal Reserve might slow its aggressive pace of interest-rate increases.



Photo:

Julia Nikhinson/Associated Press

Some of Tuesday’s sharp market moves started to unwind Wednesday. The WSJ Dollar Index lost 0.4%, after notching its largest one-day jump since March 2020. Brent crude, which fell the day before, rose 1.3% to $94.32 a barrel.

Energy stocks rose broadly as Brent crude rebounded. The sector was the top gaining segment of the S&P 500 on Wednesday.

Among the top individual gainers in the S&P 500,

Starbucks

rose 5.8% after the coffee chain raised its longer-term financial outlook. The company now sees adjusted earnings-per-share growth over the next three years of 15% to 20%, up from its previous forecast of 10% to 12%.

Also making the index leaderboard,

Moderna

shares climbed 5.1% after its CEO told Reuters the company is open to supplying Covid vaccines to China.

Shares of railroad operators declined as a possible freight labor strike looms. The White House is assessing how other transportation providers could fill potential gaps in the nation’s freight network as labor unions and railroads continue contract talks.

Union Pacific

lost 4.9%, and

CSX

fell 3.1%.

Few market watchers were willing to suggest that volatile market moves may be in the rear-view mirror—especially until the Fed’s next meeting.

The Fed will make its next interest-rate policy decision next week. Federal-funds futures, used by traders to bet on interest-rate moves, showed a 68% chance that the central bank will lift rates by 0.75-percentage point. The data also show traders are assigning a 32% probability that the Fed will increase interest rates by 1 percentage point, according to CME Group data.

U.S. Treasury yields continued their upward climb, in another signal that investors are expecting higher interest rates.

The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note rose to 3.427%, from 3.422% Tuesday. The yield on the two-year note, which is more sensitive to near-term rate expectations, climbed to 3.789%, from 3.754%. Yields and bond prices move in opposite directions. 

Some investors and strategists said the market may have overreacted Tuesday, especially after Fed Chairman

Jerome Powell

already said last month in Jackson Hole that the central bank must continue raising interest rates until it is confident inflation is under control.

“You’ve got this tension with dip buyers versus those who are selling the rally,” said Viraj Patel, global macro strategist at Vanda Research. “I think you can paint a very nice bullish picture and find plenty of evidence to buy equities, and you can paint a very nice bearish picture and find plenty of evidence to sell. That naturally means we are going to bounce around for a bit.”

Overseas, global indexes fell, following the U.S. stock market’s performance Tuesday. In Europe, the pan-continental Stoxx Europe 600 lost 1%. London’s FTSE 100 fell 1.2%, after U.K. inflation data showed that core consumer prices ticked up to 6.3% in August, from 6.2% in July, even as inflation eased slightly overall

In Asia, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index lost 2.5%, and the CSI 300 index of the largest stocks listed in Shanghai and Shenzhen was down 1.1%. Japan’s Nikkei 225 tumbled 2.8%.

Write to Caitlin McCabe at caitlin.mccabe@wsj.com and Dave Sebastian at dave.sebastian@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Read original article here

Stocks Fall on Hotter-Than-Expected Inflation Data

The Dow Jones Industrial Average slumped more than 1,000 points Tuesday after hotter-than-expected inflation data dashed investors’ hopes that cooling price pressures would prompt the Federal Reserve to moderate its campaign of interest-rate increases.

Investors sold everything from stocks and bonds to oil and gold. All 30 stocks in the blue-chip average declined, as did all 11 sectors in the S&P 500. Only five stocks in the broad benchmark were in the green in recent trading. Facebook

 

META -9.36%

parent

Meta Platforms

dropped 8.3%,

BlackRock

declined 7.2% and

Boeing

fell 6.4%.

The 3.3% tumble in the Dow put the index on pace for its worst day since May. The S&P 500 declined 3.7%, while the Nasdaq Composite slid 4.5% as rate-sensitive technology stocks took a heavy beating.

The Dow is off 14% in 2022, while the S&P 500 is down 17% and the Nasdaq Composite has fallen 25%.

Investors had eagerly anticipated Tuesday’s release of the consumer-price index, which provided a last major look at inflation before the central bank’s interest-rate-setting committee meets next week. Expectations for the path of monetary policy have held sway over the markets as investors factor higher rates into asset prices and try to project how well the economy will hold up as rates rise.

“It increases the probability of recession if the Fed has to move more significantly to address inflation,” said Chris Shipley, chief investment strategist for North America at Northern Trust Asset Management.

The consumer-sentiment index and the consumer-confidence index both try to measure the same thing: consumers’ feelings. WSJ explains why the Federal Reserve is keeping a close eye on consumer confidence in 2022. Illustration: Adele Morgan

The new data showed the consumer-price index rose 8.3% in August from the same month a year ago. That was down from 8.5% in July and 9.1% in June—the highest inflation rate in four decades.

The figures show inflation is easing, but at a slower pace than investors and economists had anticipated. Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal had been expecting consumer prices to rise 8% annually in August.

Analysts had hoped that officials would consider easing their pace of interest-rate increases if data continued to show inflation subsiding. The data undercut those hopes, seeming to settle the case for the Fed to raise rates by at least 0.75 percentage point next week. After the release, stock futures fell, bond yields rose and the dollar rallied.

Traders began to consider the possibility that the central bank will raise interest rates by a full percentage point next week.

As of Tuesday afternoon, they assigned a 28% probability to a 1-percentage-point increase at that meeting, up from a 0% chance a day earlier, according to CME Group’s FedWatch Tool.

The market-based probability of a half-percentage-point increase, by contrast, fell to 0% from 9% on Monday, according to the CME data.

The most likely scenario remained an increase of 0.75 percentage point.

Beyond next week, the suggestion that inflation is sticking around raises the possibility that the Fed might ultimately raise rates higher than markets had been anticipating.

“That’s really the challenge,” said Matt Forester, chief investment officer of Lockwood Advisors at BNY Mellon Pershing. “The Fed might have to do a lot more work in order to contain inflation.”

Food prices have surged as part of a broader pickup in U.S. inflation.



Photo:

michael reynolds/EPA/Shutterstock

Fed Chairman

Jerome Powell

said earlier this month that the central bank is squarely focused on bringing down high inflation to prevent it from becoming entrenched as it did in the 1970s.

The reaction to the new inflation reading could be seen across asset classes.

The communication services, technology and consumer discretionary sectors of the S&P 500 all fell more than 4.5%. Semiconductor stocks were particularly hard hit:

Western Digital,

Nvidia,

Advanced Micro Devices

and

Micron Technology

declined more than 7%.

In bond markets, the yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note jumped to 3.429% from 3.361% Monday. Yields and prices move in opposite directions. The rise in bond yields was an additional sign that investors were expecting higher interest rates after the data. 

Brent crude, the international benchmark for oil prices, fell 0.9% to $93.17 a barrel. Gold prices declined 1.3%.

The U.S. dollar, by contrast, rallied Tuesday. The WSJ Dollar Index, which measures the greenback against a basket of other currencies, rose 1.3%. The strong dollar has weighed on the value of other currencies against the greenback this year.

Overseas, the pan-continental Stoxx Europe 600 fell about 1.5%. In Asia, major indexes closed mixed. South Korea’s Kospi Composite rallied 2.7% , while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng declined 0.2%. 

Write to Caitlin Ostroff at caitlin.ostroff@wsj.com and Karen Langley at karen.langley@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Read original article here

Jerome Powell’s Dilemma: What If the Drivers of Inflation Are Here to Stay?

To counter the impact of a decline in global commerce and persistent shortages of labor, commodities and energy, central bankers might lift interest rates higher and for longer than in recent decades—which could result in weaker economic growth, higher unemployment and more frequent recessions.

The Federal Reserve’s current round of interest-rate increases, which economists say have pushed the U.S. to the brink of a recession, could be a taste of this new environment.

“The global economy is undergoing a series of major transitions,” said

Mark Carney,

former Bank of Canada and Bank of England governor, in a speech at an economics conference in March. “The long era of low inflation, suppressed volatility and easy financial conditions is ending.”


Target rate for

many central banks

Target rate for

many central banks

Target rate for

many central banks

Target rate for

many central banks

Target rate for

many central banks

This new era would mark an abrupt about-face after a decade in which central bankers worried more about the prospects of anemic economic growth and too-low inflation, and used monetary policy to spur expansions. It also would be a reversal for investors accustomed to low interest rates.

The challenges for policy makers will take center stage from Thursday to Saturday when they gather for the Kansas City Fed’s annual retreat in Jackson Hole, Wyo., being held in person for the first time since 2019.

The Fed could still succeed at curbing inflation by raising interest rates. Postpandemic headwinds might abate or fail to materialize if protectionism and geopolitical risks recede, labor productivity improves, a slowdown in China’s economy reduces demand for global commodities, or new technologies reduce the costs of developing new energy sources.

Mr. Powell with Mark Carney, then Bank of England Governor, in Jackson Hole, Wyo., in 2019.



Photo:

Amber Baesler/Associated Press

“Since the pandemic, we’ve been living in a world where the economy is being driven by very different forces,” Fed Chairman

Jerome Powell

said on a June panel discussion in Portugal. “What we don’t know is whether we will be going back to something that looks more like, or a little bit like, what we had before.”

European Central Bank President

Christine Lagarde

on the panel offered a more pessimistic appraisal: “I don’t think that we are going to go back to that environment of low inflation.”

The new environment reflects the stalling or potential reversal of three forces that pushed inflation down in recent decades by limiting workers’ ability to win higher wages and companies’ ability to raise prices.

Force 1: Globalization. Increased flows of trade, money, people and ideas flourished with the Cold War’s end and China’s entry into the international trading system in the 1990s. Multinational companies using new technologies constructed global supply chains focused on driving down costs by finding the cheapest place and workers to produce products. Worldwide competition drove prices lower for many goods.

This helped keep U.S. inflation stable. Over the 20 years ending in 2019, U.S. goods prices rose an average of 0.4% a year, while services prices grew 2.6% annually, leaving “core inflation”—which excludes volatile food and energy prices—around 1.7%.

After the pandemic and the Ukraine war disrupted supply chains, many business leaders adopted new processes to increase reliability even if they cost more, such as by moving production closer to home or buying from multiple suppliers. And tensions between Western democracies and Russia and China raise concerns about a possible further retreat from globalization and rise of protectionism, which would raise production costs.

“If you had all of your supply chain in just one country, you have to question why take that risk in a world where pandemics could hit or country relations could deteriorate or wars could happen between countries,” said Richmond Fed President

Tom Barkin,

a former McKinsey & Co. executive. It is difficult to predict just how durable such changes will be, he added.

Force 2: Labor markets. In an August 2020 book, “The Great Demographic Reversal,” former British central banker

Charles Goodhart

and economist Manoj Pradhan argued that the low inflation since the 1990s had less to do with central-bank policies and more with the addition of hundreds of millions of low-wage Asian and Eastern European workers, which held down labor costs and prices of manufactured goods exported to richer countries.

A farmworker adjusts sprinklers in Ventura County, Calif., in 2021.



Photo:

patrick t. fallon/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

Mr. Goodhart wrote that global labor glut was giving way to an era of worker shortages, and hence higher inflation.

Meanwhile, the U.S. labor force has roughly 2.5 million fewer workers since the pandemic began, compared to what it would have if the prepandemic trend in workforce participation had continued and after accounting for the aging of the population, according to an analysis by Didem Tüzemen, an economist at the Kansas City Fed. Its growth had already slowed before Covid-19, reflecting an aging population, declining birthrates and less immigration. The slower growth rate of the U.S. workforce could force wages higher, feeding inflation.

Wages rose about 3% annually before the pandemic. Average hourly earnings grew 5.2% in the year ended in July.




Dotted lines are estimates

Without impacts of

aging labor force and

declining population

growth

Without impacts of

declining population

growth

Dotted lines are estimates

Without impacts of

aging labor force

and declining

population growth

Without impacts of

declining population

growth

Dotted lines are estimates

Without impacts of

aging labor force and

declining population

growth

Without impacts of

declining population

growth

Without impacts of aging labor force and declining

population growth

Without impacts of declining population growth

Dotted lines

are estimates

Without impacts of aging labor force and

declining population growth

Without impacts of declining

population growth

Dotted lines

are estimates

Roughly a million people moved to the U.S. annually in the years after the 2007-09 recession. That pace began to taper during the Trump administration and turned into a trickle after the pandemic started. The slowdown left the U.S. with 1.8 million fewer immigrants of working age—about 0.9% of the working-age population—than if pre-2019 immigration trends had continued, according to research by Giovanni Peri, a labor economist at the University of California, Davis.

Mr. Powell in a May interview pointed to the potential for reduced immigration to create a “persistent imbalance between supply and demand in the labor market.” He added: “If you have a slower growing labor market, you’re going to have a smaller economy.”

Force 3: Energy, commodity prices. Energy and commodity firms haven’t heavily invested in new production over the past decade, creating risks of more persistent shortages when global demand is growing. When the Fed broke the back of high inflation in the early 1980s, then-Chairman Paul Volcker enjoyed some helpful tailwinds in the form of decadelong investments in oil.

Before the emergence of these three factors, the Fed could raise rates at a leisurely pace and could pursue policies that simultaneously kept unemployment and inflation low, something economists later dubbed the “divine coincidence.”

That was possible when the main threats to the economy were “demand shocks”—pullbacks in hiring, consumer spending and business investment—which slow both inflation and growth, as in the recessions of 2001 and 2007-09.

Ben Bernanke, then Fed chairman, testifies on Capitol Hill in 2008.



Photo:

Susan Walsh/ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Fed cut rates to near zero in 2008 to stimulate economic activity, held them there until 2015, then raised them at a glacial pace by historical standards. The unemployment rate fell below 4% in 2018, and inflation stayed at or just below the central bank’s 2% target. After raising the fed-funds rate to around 2.4% at the end of 2018, Mr. Powell cut rates slightly following a growth scare in 2019.

Those experiences heavily shaped the Fed’s initial response to the pandemic in 2020. Fearing another decade of sluggish growth and too-low inflation, it cut rates to near zero and promised to keep providing stimulus even after the White House and Congress aggressively boosted federal spending.

‘Supply shocks’

Rather than reducing economic demand, the forces that emerged during the pandemic were what economists call “supply shocks”—events that curtail the economy’s ability to provide goods and services, which in turn hurt growth and spurred inflation. Covid-19 lockdowns and stronger demand for goods disrupted supply chains, as did Russia’s Ukraine invasion and the West’s financial counterassault. Labor shortages emerged across the U.S.

With supply shocks, the Fed faces a harder trade-off between growth and inflation, because attacking inflation invariably means damping growth and employment. In such an environment, “there is no divine coincidence anymore,” said

Jean Boivin,

a former Bank of Canada official who heads the BlackRock Investment Institute.

The Fed and most other central banks initially misread the economy because, in early 2021, price increases could be traced clearly to the effects of the pandemic, affecting a small number of goods, such as used cars. By the end of the year, however, higher inflation had become increasingly broad-based.

One measure produced by the Dallas Fed, called a “trimmed mean” annual inflation rate, which excludes the most volatile categories to capture an underlying trend, rose from 2% last August to 3.5% in January and 4.3% in June.

“This is looking like the 1990s turned on its head,” said Stephen Cecchetti, a Brandeis University economics professor. “Every forecaster back then underestimated growth and overestimated inflation systemically for almost the whole decade. Now, it looks like we’re in for the reverse of this, which will be very, very unpleasant because it means we’re suddenly going to hit trade-offs.”

A wheat field burns after Russian shelling in Ukraine in July.



Photo:

Evgeniy Maloletka/Associated Press

The low-inflation environment of the past 30 years caused consumers and businesses to not think much about price increases. Fed officials now worry that even if prices rise temporarily, consumers and businesses could come to expect higher inflation to persist. That could help fuel higher inflation as workers demand higher pay that employers would pass onto consumers through higher prices.

“The risk is that because of a multiplicity of shocks, you start to transition to a higher-inflation regime,’’ Mr. Powell said on the June panel. “Our job is literally to prevent that from happening. And we will prevent that from happening.”

share your thoughts

How should the Federal Reserve respond to higher inflationary pressures? Join the conversation below.

Last year, Mr. Powell suggested he was skeptical of the idea that the forces underpinning globalization would shift overnight, as Mr. Goodhart suggested. But he has given more attention to the idea in the aftermath of the Ukraine war, which has highlighted the potential for significant economic and financial fallout from geopolitical conflicts.

By sending inflation, and especially energy prices, to such elevated levels, the war could serve as a trigger “to make people realize that inflation—and quite high inflation—is a real possibility,” said Mr. Goodhart. In turn, that could weaken the public’s confidence that “everything will go back to normal.”

“The argument of central banks, that they will get inflation back to target at 2% two years from now, is becoming increasingly implausible because they’ve said that all along and, of course, they haven’t achieved it,” he said.

Recession risk

The Fed’s aggressive interest-rate increases this year could be the first example of what happens with U.S. monetary policy in this new environment. Faster and bigger rate rises create greater risks of recession and could upend popular investment strategies by leading to more frequent losses for the two main components of traditional asset portfolios—stocks and long-term U.S. Treasury bonds.

The closed doors of the Pasadena, Calif., community job center during the coronavirus outbreak in May 2020.



Photo:

Damian Dovarganes/Associated Press

Fed officials have raised the fed-funds rate by a cumulative 2.25 percentage points this year, the fastest pace since they began using the rate as their primary policy-setting tool in the early 1990s. The rate influences other borrowing costs throughout the economy.

The Fed began with a quarter-point increase in March, followed by a half-point rise in May and increases of 0.75 point each in June and in July. At their meeting last month, officials debated how and when to dial back the pace of those increases, according to minutes of the meeting released Aug. 17.

An important shift occurred between Fed officials’ May and June meetings, when Mr. Powell secured consensus that they would need to raise rates high enough to slow growth. Through the summer, Fed officials have been unusually united over their goal, but if the labor market cools and the economy slows, Mr. Powell could face a trickier task forging agreement.

Several former Fed officials who have worked closely with Mr. Powell say he is likely to err on the side of raising rates too much, rather than too little, because tolerating excessive inflation would represent a much greater institutional failure for the central bank. Mr. Powell has hammered home the primacy of lowering inflation to the Fed’s 2% target.

“We can’t fail on this,” Mr. Powell told lawmakers on June 23, describing the Fed’s commitment as “unconditional.”

Write to Nick Timiraos at nick.timiraos@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Read original article here

Tech Stocks Lead Market Lower as Investors Await Inflation Data

U.S. stock indexes were lower Tuesday as investors monitored earnings reports and economic data ahead of inflation figures due later in the week.

The S&P 500 slipped 0.7%, a day after the broad index finished with modest losses. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 0.4% while the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite fell 1.5%.

Investors await consumer-price data on Wednesday that could set expectations for how the Federal Reserve will approach monetary policy at its coming meetings. In recent weeks, better-than-expected corporate earnings and strong labor-market data have eased concerns about an imminent U.S. recession, helping stock markets rebound from their lows. 

With inflation running at a multidecade high, investors say Wednesday’s consumer-price index update will be key to the outlook for rates and the direction of the market. 

“The market has enjoyed a risk-on environment since the lows of mid-June, and investors interpreted Chair [Jerome] Powell as more dovish than he had hoped at the last Federal Reserve meeting,” said Quincy Krosby, chief global strategist for LPL Financial. “But today’s market is tomorrow’s market—Wednesday’s inflation data will provide a clearer picture as to whether this bear market is truly behind us.”

According to Ms. Krosby, inflation is the No. 1 concern for the market, including not only whether it is subsiding, but how quickly.

Earnings season is winding down, though some major companies are still set to report figures. Roblox, Coinbase Global and Wynn Resorts will release results after markets close. Chip maker

Micron Technology

fell 4.7% Tuesday after issuing a revenue warning, just a day after

Nvidia

offered similar preliminary guidance.

Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings

fell 11% after reporting a wider-than-expected quarterly loss. Shares of peer cruise line

Carnival Corporation

fell 5.7% as the pockets of the travel sector struggle to recover from its pandemic lows.

Energy stocks gained 1.7% in the morning session, led by shares of Occidental Petroleum which advanced 4.4% on the back of news Monday that Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway took its stake in the company past the 20% mark.

Traders worked on the trading floor at the New York Stock Exchange on Monday.



Photo:

ANDREW KELLY/REUTERS

Brent crude prices flip-flopped in Tuesday trading, swinging 1.8% in either direction. Barrels of the crude benchmark lurched into positive territory early in the morning after Moscow cut the flow of oil through a pipeline to Europe, and last traded nearly flat at $96.62 per barrel.

“Oil prices are still driven by the near-term macroeconomic outlook,” said

Robert Thummel,

managing director and senior portfolio manager of TortoiseEcofin. “Concerns remain that the Federal Reserve will continue slowing the economy if Wednesday’s inflation data comes in higher than expected, but markets still see persistent undersupply and high demand as creating upward pressure on oil prices.

Data released Tuesday showed U.S. labor productivity declined for a second straight quarter while labor costs were more elevated than economists expected.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note edged up to 2.800% from 2.763% on Monday, while the two-year yield rose to 3.263% from 3.214%. With shorter-term yields significantly above longer-term ones, the yield curve remains inverted, a key recession indicator.

Overseas, the Stoxx Europe 600 fell 0.7%, with losses led by travel and technology firms. In Asia, stock markets were mixed. In Japan, the Nikkei 225 fell 0.9% while in China, the Shanghai Composite Index rose 0.3%. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index weakened by 0.2%.

Write to Will Horner at william.horner@wsj.com and Eric Wallerstein at eric.wallerstein@wsj.com

We want to hear from you

By submitting your response to this questionnaire, you consent to Dow Jones processing your special categories of personal information and are indicating that your answers may be investigated and published by The Wall Street Journal and you are willing to be contacted by a Journal reporter to discuss your answers further. In an article on this subject, the Journal will not attribute your answers to you by name unless a reporter contacts you and you provide that consent.

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Read original article here

Stocks Pare Gains With Earnings in Focus

U.S. stocks wavered Monday as investors reviewed a series of earnings reports for insight into the impact of higher inflation on companies and consumers.  

The S&P 500 was down 0.2%, as the broad-market index shed some ground after morning gains. The Nasdaq Composite also ticked down 0.1%, after earlier flirting with a potential exit of the recent bear market. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was roughly flat.

Tech giant

Nvidia

declined 8.7% after reporting preliminary quarterly revenue that came in below analysts’ forecasts. The company said it expects challenging market conditions to persist in the third quarter.

Palantir Technologies

fell 12% after it issued guidance that missed Wall Street’s estimates.

Stocks have swayed in recent days, buffeted by shifting views on central bank policy. Friday’s better-than-expected jobs report divided investors and analysts. Some raised concerns that the Federal Reserve could continue raising interest rates aggressively, while others questioned whether the U.S. economy could really be in recession. 

“Markets are still digesting the payrolls report from Friday. When you see what’s happening in the labor market, this doesn’t look like a recession in the sort of broad sense,” said

Kiran Ganesh,

a multiasset strategist at UBS. “Investors seem to be in the mood to listen to the good news.”

Trading volumes also tend to be lower in August while many traders take summer vacations, which can drive outsize moves, analysts said. For those still in the office, investors are awaiting U.S. inflation data for July out on Wednesday, a key release which is expected to provide more direction for markets.

“Clearly today, markets are showing a glass half full and they’re focusing a little bit more on the economy doing well and a little less on the Fed being more aggressive,” said

Chris Zaccarelli,

chief investment officer for Independent Advisor Alliance.

Though that could change, Mr. Zaccarelli added, if Wednesday’s inflation data comes in higher than expected.

Mr. Zaccarelli said his firm recently added more healthcare and small and mid-sized technology companies to its portfolios, and has maintained exposure to defensive sectors like consumer staples and utilities. “We were taking less risk early on, now we’re back to probably a neutral position,” he said.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note edged down to 2.788% from 2.838% on Friday. The inverted yield curve continued to flash a recessionary signal, with the 2-year yield at 3.214%. 

“What we infer from the bond market is that investors are positioning for a slowdown. Bond markets have started to increasingly price in a higher chance of a 75-basis-point hike in September,” said Karim Chedid, an investment strategist at BlackRock. 

“Despite this, equities have somewhat held up. I think the reasons for it have to do with better-than-expected earnings so far this season,” Mr. Chedid said.

Traders worked on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Friday.



Photo:

angela weiss/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

Berkshire Hathaway

added 0.5% after reporting quarterly results over the weekend. The investment firm’s operating earnings, CEO

Warren Buffett’s

preferred metric, rose although the company posted a net loss.

Tesla

rose 4%. The U.S. Senate passed a bill on Sunday to spend billions of dollars on climate, including the extension of a tax incentive for electric vehicles.

Signify Health

jumped 14% after The Wall Street Journal reported that drugstore chain

CVS Health

is planning to bid for the company.

Global Blood Therapeutics

climbed 4.4% after

Pfizer

agreed to buy the company for $5.4 billion.

Results are due after the closing bell from videogame firm

Take-Two Interactive Software,

vaccine-maker

Novavax,

insurer American International Group and News Corp, which owns The Wall Street Journal. 

Overseas, the pan-continental Stoxx Europe 600 rose 1%. Retail investment firm Hargreaves Lansdown climbed 8% after reporting better-than-expected earnings and raising its guidance for 2023.

Oil prices slipped, with global crude benchmark Brent falling 1% to trade at $93.96 a barrel. 

In Asia, major benchmarks were mixed. The Shanghai Composite Index added 0.3%, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index slid 0.8%. Japan’s Nikkei 225 added 0.3%.

SoftBank reported a record $23 billion quarterly loss driven by the global selloff in tech stocks after markets closed in Tokyo. It said it used some of its

Alibaba

holdings to raise cash from lenders and shore up its finances. Shares of Alibaba fell 1.2%.

Write to Anna Hirtenstein at anna.hirtenstein@wsj.com

We want to hear from you

By submitting your response to this questionnaire, you consent to Dow Jones processing your special categories of personal information and are indicating that your answers may be investigated and published by The Wall Street Journal and you are willing to be contacted by a Journal reporter to discuss your answers further. In an article on this subject, the Journal will not attribute your answers to you by name unless a reporter contacts you and you provide that consent.

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Read original article here

Worker Pay and Benefits Rose 1.3% in Second Quarter

Worker pay and benefits are rising this year at the fastest pace on record, keeping pressure on historically high inflation.

Business and government employers spent 5.1% more on compensation for workers in the second quarter compared with the same period a year earlier, without adjusting for seasonality, the Labor Department said Friday. That marked the fastest annual pace on records back to 2001, eclipsing the 4.5% annual increase in the first quarter.

Wages and benefits for civilian workers increased a seasonally adjusted 1.3% in the second quarter, a slight slowdown from record-high growth of 1.4% in the first quarter as employers pulled back on benefits this spring. Wages and salaries for private-sector workers accelerated, growing 1.6% in the spring versus 1.3% during the first three months of the year.

The growth in compensation shows that employers continued to seek workers and increase wages in a historically tight job market, even as the economy shrunk in the second quarter.

“The rest of the economy might be slowing down, but wages are speeding up,” said

Nick Bunker,

economist at jobs site Indeed. “Competition for workers remains fierce as employers have to keep bidding up wages for new hires.”

A separate Commerce Department report Friday showed consumers boosted their seasonally adjusted spending by 1.1% in June, up from a revised 0.3% increase in May. Personal income rose by 0.6% last month.

The report showed that inflation as measured by the Federal Reserve’s preferred gauge, the personal-consumption expenditures price index, rose 6.8% in June from the year before, up from the 6.3% increase in the 12 months through May.

Economists say the latest employment-cost figures are a discouraging sign for Federal Reserve officials as they try to bring four-decade high inflation down to their target of 2%. Companies often pass on price increases to consumers to compensate for higher labor costs.

On Wednesday, the Fed lifted its benchmark interest rate to a range between 2.25% and 2.5%.

“The Fed is closely tracking the data for signs of a wage-price spiral,” said Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics, in a note, describing when rising prices cause workers to demand higher wages, which in turn causes companies to raise prices. “These readings, which are showing no sign of easing, will only strengthen the Fed’s resolve to keep moving interest rates higher.”

Richard Moody, chief economist at

Regions Financial Corp.

, thinks wage growth will cool only gradually because employers are competing for a limited pool of workers. Job openings, at 11.3 million in May, have held well above prepandemic levels, and there are fewer workers seeking jobs than before Covid-19 took hold in the U.S.

Workers are also changing jobs at high rates. That dynamic is contributing to wage growth, as job switchers tend to reap bigger pay increases and put pressure on employers to raise pay for existing employees.

Jerry Pugh,

who owns 15 locations of suburban Atlanta-based gym franchise Workout Anytime, said many long-term employees have left for other industries or higher pay over the past year and a half, keeping the gyms in constant hiring mode. Mr. Pugh said the facilities need general managers, sales staff, personal trainers and fitness directors.

Workout Anytime gyms are dealing with staff turnover and higher wages—factors also affecting employers in other industries.



Photo:

Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

“You can still get quality employees, but the price you’re having to pay is much higher than it was before Covid,” said Mr. Pugh. “Everybody wants more money than they’ve ever wanted.”

Mr. Pugh’s gyms are paying higher commission rates to personal trainers than a year ago, and they also are paying trainers $12 to $14 an hour for “floor hours,” in which they try to pull in new members for their services. That is up from an hourly rate of $10 a year ago. The gyms recently started offering other incentives, including paying for some high-performing employees’ personal-training or nutrition certifications.

To offset some of the higher labor costs, the gyms raised rates for new members by 99 cents a month at the end of last year. The basic monthly membership price is now $19.99. Mr. Pugh said the company is weighing another price increase.

Workers’ wage gains are largely falling behind inflation. Adjusted for inflation, private-sector wages and salaries fell 3.1% in the second quarter from a year earlier.

Wages for leisure and hospitality workers started surging last year as restaurants, bars and hotels reopened and struggled to find workers. There are signs that wage growth in the sector remains strong but is cooling as more workers trickle into the labor force.

Carrols Restaurant Group Inc.,

which operates more than a thousand Burger King locations and dozens of Popeyes restaurants, is seeing some slight easing of wage pressures. Average hourly wages for team members increased 13.6% from a year earlier in the company’s fiscal first quarter, compared with 14.2% in the fourth quarter, said

Anthony Hull,

chief financial officer of the Syracuse, N.Y.-based company.

“Hiring pressures are stabilizing as we are seeing an increase in application flow,” Mr. Hull said in an earnings call in May. The company has paid more to team members who acted as managers by opening and closing the restaurants. Mr. Hull said he expects those cost pressures to cool as turnover among managers declines.

Write to Sarah Chaney Cambon at sarah.chaney@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Read original article here

U.S. GDP Fell at 0.9% Annual Rate in Second Quarter

The U.S. economy shrank for a second quarter in a row—a common definition of recession—as businesses trimmed their inventories, the housing market buckled under rising interest rates, and high inflation took steam out of consumer spending.

Gross domestic product, a broad measure of the goods and services produced across the economy, fell at an inflation and seasonally adjusted annual rate of 0.9% in the second quarter, the Commerce Department said Thursday. That marked a deterioration from the 1.6% rate of contraction recorded in the first three months of 2022.

The report indicated the economy met a commonly used definition of recession—two straight quarters of declining economic output.

The official arbiter of recessions in the U.S. is the National Bureau of Economic Research, which defines one as a significant decline in economic activity, spread across the economy for more than a few months. Its Business Cycle Dating Committee considers factors including employment, output, retail sales, and household income—and it usually doesn’t make a recession determination until long after the fact.

The GDP report offered some discouraging signs, and underscored the challenges facing U.S. businesses, consumers and policy makers—including high inflation, weakening consumer sentiment and supply-chain volatility.

Consumer spending accounts for roughly two-thirds of total economic output, and Thursday’s report showed Americans spent at a cooler clip in the second quarter. Business investment worsened slightly. The housing sector slowed as borrowing costs rose.

Two volatile categories buffeted the headline figure: Private nonfarm inventories subtracted 1.96 percentage point from the second quarter’s GDP figure. Trade also played a large role in the second quarter. Net exports–the difference between exports and imports–added 1.43 percentage point.

Inflation hit a fresh four-decade high during the second quarter, hammering consumer sentiment and eroding Americans’ purchasing power. The Federal Reserve responded by aggressively raising interest rates, which in turn cooled the housing market, reducing brokers’ commissions and denting residential investment.

The U.S. economic recovery is following an unusual trajectory, with weakening output but strong job gains. The unemployment rate, a key barometer of economic health, held steady at a low 3.6% for the past four months, and employers continued to hire at a strong pace. Most economists in a Wall Street Journal survey expect the economy to grow in the third quarter and in 2022 as a whole, though lately they have been dropping their estimates.

“We’re in a sentiment recession. I don’t think we’re in an actual recession. The growth slowdown has been driven by inflation and price shocks—as they fade in the near term, that should allow growth to accelerate,” said

Aneta Markowska,

chief financial economist at Jefferies. She expects the economy to expand 1.7% this year, measured from the fourth quarter of last year.

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

What is your outlook for the U.S. economy? Join the conversation below.

Economists say idiosyncratic factors weighed on the U.S. economy in the first half of the year, like the inventory buildup and swings in exports and imports. A shift in spending away from goods back toward services, and rising prices cutting into people’s buying power, left many companies with stockpiles of products they are now discounting to unload.

Walmart Inc.

said on Monday that it was having to cut prices to reduce merchandise levels at its flagship chain and Sam’s Club warehouse chain. Many manufacturers are also still struggling with pandemic-related supply-chain disruptions.

Business is “a little unhealthy right now” at Best Tool & Engineering Co., according to its president, Joseph Cherluck. The company, based in Clinton Township, Mich., makes tools and plastic components like welding fixtures for vehicle dashboards, and the nationwide shortage of computer chips means auto makers are pushing back orders.

“Autos are waiting for chips and we’re seeing it down the supply chain,” said Mr. Cherluck, adding that he is concerned about the economy slowing. The 15-employee company has frozen equipment purchases and scaled back hiring plans as a result. “I feel uncertain about the rest of the year,” Mr. Cherluck said.

The Fed raised interest rates on Wednesday and indicated more increases were likely coming to combat inflation. The central bank this year has lifted its benchmark rate by a cumulative 2.25 percentage points, to rein in high inflation, which has hurt consumer confidence and outpaced growth in workers’ wages.

Household spending, the linchpin of the U.S. economy, held up in the second quarter. Consumers continued to travel and shop as more people gained jobs and as their savings—boosted by federal stimulus efforts—remained above prepandemic levels.

The consumer-sentiment index and the consumer-confidence index both try to measure the same thing: consumers’ feelings. WSJ explains why the Federal Reserve is keeping a close eye on consumer confidence in 2022. Illustration: Adele Morgan

Consumers face a mixed outlook for the rest of the year, bedeviled by high inflation but supported by a strong labor market. Analysts say that a decline in gasoline prices from their mid-June high should put extra dollars in people’s pockets in the current third quarter.

Americans also have relatively healthy balance sheets. After the pandemic hit the U.S. economy in early 2020 and prompted a short but sharp recession, increased household saving, government stimulus checks and enhanced unemployment benefits boosted household finances. The resulting “excess savings”—the amount above what they would have had there been no pandemic—remain elevated. According to Moody’s Analytics, excess savings totaled $2.5 trillion in May. That propelled consumer spending and helped the economy last year post its best growth since 1984.

Some consumers are hunkering down now. Aimie Gresham of Essex, Conn., has pulled back on discretionary spending—like dining out and expensive salon visits—to pay the higher prices for basics like oil, electricity and groceries she has faced in recent months.

“Even my cat’s food has gone up” by about $10 a bag over the past year, said Ms. Gresham, who works at a retirement financial firm. Her husband’s car has 250,000 miles on it, but the couple decided not to replace it because of the current high prices. “In any other market we would be buying a new car right now,” said the 54-year-old.

Write to Harriet Torry at harriet.torry@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Read original article here

There Are Signs Inflation May Have Peaked, but Can It Come Down Fast Enough?

Growing signs that price pressures are easing suggest that June’s distressingly high 9.1% increase in consumer prices will probably be the peak. But even if inflation indeed comes down, economists see a slow pace of decline.

Ed Hyman,

chairman of Evercore ISI, pointed to many indicators that  9.1% might have been the top. Gasoline prices have fallen around 10% from their mid-June high point of $5.02 a gallon, according to AAA. Wheat futures prices have fallen by 37% since mid-May and corn futures prices are down 27% from mid-June. The cost of shipping goods from East Asia to the U.S. West Coast is 11.4% lower than a month ago, according to Xeneta, a Norway-based transportation-data and procurement firm.

Easing price pressures and improvements in backlogs and supplier delivery times in business surveys suggest that supply-chain snarls are unraveling. Mr. Hyman noted that money-supply growth has slowed sharply, evidence that monetary tightening is starting to bite.

Inflation expectations also fell recently—an upbeat signal for the Fed, which believes that such expectations influence wage and price-setting behavior and thus actual inflation. The University of Michigan consumer-sentiment survey showed that longer-term inflation expectations slipped from June’s 3.1% reading to 2.8% in late June and early July, matching the average rate during the 20 years before the pandemic.

Bond investors are less worried about inflation, based on the “break-even inflation rate”—the difference between the yield on regular five-year Treasury bonds and on inflation-indexed bonds—which has dropped to 2.67% from an all-time high of 3.59% hit in late March.

Inflation-based derivatives and bonds are projecting that the annual increase in the CPI will fall to 2.3% in just a year, around the Fed’s 2% target (which uses a different price index), according to the Intercontinental Exchange.

Roberto Perli,

economist at Piper Sandler, calls such an outcome “optimistic but not totally implausible.” From February through early June, investors thought inflation would still be between 4% and 5% in a year.

“It’s a step in the right direction, but ultimately, even if June is the peak, we’re still looking at an environment where inflation is too hot,” said

Sarah House,

senior economist at Wells Fargo, who expects fourth-quarter inflation between 7.5% and 7.8%. “So peak or not, inflation is going to remain painful through the end of the year.”

And the slower it is to ebb, the larger the likelihood of a damaging downturn, said

Brett Ryan,

senior U.S. economist at Deutsche Bank.

Core inflation, which strips out volatile food and energy prices and is considered a better measure of inflation trends, was 5.9% in June, down from a peak of 6.5% in March. But Ms. House and Mr. Ryan both expect core inflation to revive and peak sometime around September, as strong price growth for housing and other services combines with low base comparisons in the 12-month calculation.

“The more persistent inflation pressures, the higher the Federal Reserve needs [interest rates] to go to address them,” said Mr. Ryan. “That argues for a larger recession risk.”

Fed Chairman

Jerome Powell

has said the central bank wants to see clear and convincing evidence that price pressures are subsiding before slowing or suspending rate increases.

“The moment of truth comes at the end of this year,” said Mr. Hyman. “If the Fed keeps on raising rates, then they’d invert the yield curve. I think that would increase the odds of recession enormously. It would probably also lower inflation, although it also seems to already be slowing, and will probably be even slower by then.”

Aichi Amemiya,

U.S. economist at Nomura, said that though it is too early to call it, his forecast sees June as the peak for the annual measure of overall inflation. However, the month-over-month change in core CPI will be key to watch in coming months, he said. If it slows from June’s pace of 0.7% to 0.3% on a sustained basis by year-end, he expects the Fed to start planning to ease up on rate increases. That, however, will be hard to achieve, said Mr. Amemiya, “which means the Fed will likely continue tightening even after the economy enters a recession.”

Around the turn of the year, economists were generally confident that inflation would peak in early 2022, as energy prices stabilized and supply-chain pressures eased. Then Russia invaded Ukraine, and energy prices soared. Buzz about  “the peak” crescendoed again when inflation slid to an 8.3% annual rate in April, from 8.5% in March. But gasoline prices flared up again, and gains in food and rent picked up, too.

There is plenty of potential for another reversal in coming months, said Ms. House.

“When we look at ongoing core inflation pressures, it wouldn’t take much in the way of a commodities price shock for us to reach another high,” she said, adding that possible examples include an escalation of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, a hurricane that shuts down an oil refinery, or an outage at a key semiconductor or auto plant. “We all hope we’re at the peak. But hope is not really an inflation strategy right now.”

Write to Gwynn Guilford at gwynn.guilford@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Read original article here