The word of the day is inflation
As data from many a nation
Appears, still, to show
It has room to grow
With fears this is no aberration
But are things as bad as we hear
From media outlets who cheer
More pain, as they make
Their case Trump will break
The nation, and stoke some more fear
It’s CPI day here in the US and similarly, we got readings from various nations around the world overnight. To level set, expectations for this morning’s numbers are:
- Headline – 0.5% M/M, 4.2% Y/Y
- Core – 0.3% M/M, 2.9% Y/Y
On an annual basis, as you can see in the below chart from tradingeconomics.com, 4.2%, while much higher than some recent data and much higher than we would like, was seen as recently as April 2023 during the “transitory” phase from the Covid years.

And don’t get me wrong, I am as sensitive to inflation as all of you as I go to the supermarket or Costco and see prices and fill up my car’s gas tank as well. In fact, speaking of gasoline, there is no question it is much higher than it was prior to the beginning of the Iran conflict. Looking at the chart I drew from FRED data below shows that, nominally, it is back at levels from the immediate aftermath of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022. But look at the other line on the chart, that is the price of a gallon of unleaded adjusted for CPI starting back in 1990. It is remarkable that the latest reading, while still obviously higher than a few months ago, is just $1.635/gallon in real terms.

Somebody else pointed out that gasoline is one of the few things that seems rarely to be described in real terms, arguably because it hasn’t really risen all that much over time and those who describe things in real terms are frequently trying to make the point that inflation is far too high. Arguably, though, this is further proof of famed economist Julian Simon’s thesis that commodity prices all head lower over time as the ability to produce them in abundance, and their relative abundance in the earth, drive those prices lower.
As to elsewhere in the world, last night China reported that CPI (blue bars) remained at 1.2% but PPI, which may be a better indication of price activity there, rose to 3.9%. This implies that Chinese corporate profits are under increasing pressure. It also represents a sea change in China as can be seen in the below chart where PPI (grey bars) was negative for the 3 years prior to April.

Source: tradingeconomics.com
As with all inflation analysis, the real question is who absorbs the price pressures. In the US, the recent experience from Covid, when the government helicoptered $5 trillion into the economy so people had money to spend, businesses raised prices and continue to believe they can do so. Apparently in China, that is not the case. To finish the discussion, below is a chart of 17 of the G20 nations and their most recent headline CPI readings (I left out Argentina, Turkey and Russia as I couldn’t fit them all on the screenshot). Interestingly, only 11 of these 17 nations have seen CPI rise in the past month. I wonder, is inflation the global phenomenon that some make it out to be.
Country Last. Previous Date

Ok enough on that. Let’s move on to market activity. For the past several days, the oil story did not seem quite as important as despite a few random missiles being fired, it appeared that the Iran conflict was quieting down. This allowed the focus to turn to important things like AI and the SpaceX IPO coming tomorrow after the close. For example, when I sat down this morning around 5:00, oil was around $87.50/bbl and had slipped slightly lower compared to yesterday’s close. However, in the interim, President Trump tweeted out the following:

But despite these comments, while oil has jumped as per the below chart, it is just barely at $90/bbl, hardly a sign the market believes something dramatic is on its way.

Source: tradingeconomics.com
In the meantime, there continue to be multiple articles that we are heading to the cliff for oil inventories and prices will skyrocket soon. You know my opinion on those as I take the market’s side things are not as dire as some believe.
But if things heat up in Iran and the Gulf, I expect that we will see a downdraft in equities and bonds while the dollar moves higher. And that is what we are currently seeing. Below is a screenshot of equity futures markets as of 7:45 this morning.
source: tradingeconomics.com
Not a lot of happy faces there. As well, overnight saw weakness throughout most of Asia after yesterday’s modest US declines.
In the bond market, Treasury yields are backing up 3bps and European sovereign yields are also higher this morning, between 3bps and 5bps across the entire continent. So despite my statements above that inflation may not be as big a deal as some explain, bond investors are at least a bit uncomfortable this morning.
As to the metals markets, that break below the 200-day moving average in gold is seeing real follow through as old long positions and new short momentum plays pile on with the barbarous relic (-2.5%) tumbling as well as silver (-1.9%) and copper (-1.2%). The key here is that whatever the short-term price action is, I think the one unalloyed truth is that fiat currencies will continue to get printed like there is no tomorrow and precious metals will regain their form. But it could take a while. In that vein, there was a Bloomberg article this morning explaining that more government bonds have been sold at this point in the year, ~$504 billion, than the first half of 2020 with Covid. If my short-term inflation thesis is wrong, this is the reason why.
Finally, the dollar has edged higher this morning but is generally little changed. The noteworthy thing is that USDJPY is at 160.50, above the supposed line-in-the-sand for the MOF, but as you can see from the below chart, the movement has been extremely gradual, with very little volatility. Remember, one of the things the MOF focuses on is that volatility, so if the dollar continues to creep higher, they are likely to hold off for a while before feeling the need to intervene.

Source: tradingeconomics.com
But otherwise, most currency movement has been modest overnight.
Aside from CPI, and the oil inventory data, we do hear from the Bank of Canada, which is likely to leave policy rates on hold.
It feels like the market is getting increasingly concerned over an uptick in activities in the Gulf, which will have a negative impact on financial assets but support the dollar. We shall see.
Good luck
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