The Kingdom that’s sort of United Reported inflation’s ignited And simply won’t fall Regardless of all The rate hikes that they’ve expedited But of more importance today Is hearing what Jay has to say He’ll speak to the House Whose members will grouse Though their views will not hold much sway
Starting with the first big data point, CPI in the UK was higher than expected yet again, printing at 8.7%, unchanged from April’s reading and above the 8.4% consensus expectation. Core CPI actually rose further, to 7.1%, a new high reading for the current bout of inflation and an indication that thus far, the BOE has not been very effective in fighting inflation. The market response was mostly in line with what one would expect as the equity market sold off alongside Gilts as yields climbed further. In fact, 2yr Gilt yields are now above 5.0% for the first time since 2008 and the UK yield curve is also steeply inverted, albeit not as steeply as the US curve. As well, the OIS market is now pricing a one-third probability of a 50bp rate hike by the BOE when they meet tomorrow. But weirdly, the pound is under pressure this morning. It is the worst performing G10 currency (-0.4%) and unlike most recent market reactions, where higher interest rates lead to currency strength, it has a throwback feel to your old International Finance textbooks where higher inflation leads to currency weakness.
Arguably, the biggest problem that Governor Bailey has right now is that it doesn’t seem to matter what the BOE does, prices are continuing to rise. My sense is that interest rate hikes may not be the right medicine for the UK’s current ailments (which could well be true in the US) as the genesis of this inflation is not excessive economic growth driving demand but rather fiscal policy profligacy driving demand. If it is the latter, then higher interest rates may only exacerbate the inflation situation as the increased cost of debt service simply adds to the growing budget deficit which increases the amount of money available for people to spend. Consider, if one owns 2yr Gilts yielding 5%, the amount of income available to that person/entity is far greater than when 2yr Gilts were yielding 1% two years ago and so there is more money to spend. Just like in the US, the employment situation in the UK remains tight and wages are rising along with interest rates. In other words, there is a lot more money floating around chasing goods, a pretty surefire recipe for increasing inflation. Alas, this idea doesn’t fit well within the Keynesian dogma so I fear things will take a long time to recover in the UK.
Turning to the US, this morning we will hear from Chairman Powell for the first time since the FOMC meeting a week ago as he testifies before the House Financial Services Committee. While it is always difficult to anticipate what types of questions people like Representative Maxine Waters (who thankfully no longer chairs this committee) will ask, I expect that there will be a lot of discussion regarding whether the Fed should continue tightening policy in the face of recent softer, albeit still high, inflation readings, and what is being done about issues like bank safety and oversight. I am also quite confident that there will be questions/demands for the Fed to do something about climate change although Chairman Powell has already made clear it is not in their mandate.
However, ex ante, trying to assess what Powell is likely to say, I would estimate he will continue with the current Fed mantra of inflation remains far too high and that they are going to bring the rate of inflation back to their 2% target. He is also likely to admit that doing so will cause pain via rising unemployment, something no Congressman/woman is going to want to hear. But just like in the UK as explained above, it is entirely possible that the Fed’s reading of the current situation may not be accurate. The playbook, as written by Paul Volcker, explains that the way to squash inflation is to raise interest rates high enough to cause a recession, kill demand and watch price increases end. And that worked well in 1980-1982 as the US was dealing with both rising commodity prices as well as a demographic boom as Baby Boomers were entering the workforce along with women and there was a significant uptick in activity and productivity.
The problem for Powell, who came of age during that period, is that is not very descriptive of today’s economy. Instead, we have just come through a massive fiscal policy spend on the back of the pandemic response (similar to the end of a war) but the demographics are far less impactful as population is growing far more slowly and the working population is growing even slower. Higher interest rates have increased the income for retirees and allowed them to increase demand as they spend that newfound money. I’m not saying that cutting rates is the right path, just that raising them a lot more may not be very effective either. Fiscal discipline would be a far more effective tool to fight inflation in the current environment I believe. Alas, that is something that simply no longer exists. As such, I fear that we are going to see inflation remain much higher than we had become used to for a much longer time. I expect 4% is the new 2%.
At any rate, ahead of the Powell comments, which begin at 10:00am, this is what we’ve seen overnight. Japanese equities continue to rock, rising again and now up nearly 29% YTD in yen terms. The Nikkei has reached its highest level since December 1989, although has not yet passed the peak set in September of that year. However, Chinese equities are on a completely different trajectory right now, with both the Hang Seng and mainland indices down on the year. It seems investors are not enamored of President Xi’s economic leadership right now. As to Europe, it is mostly softer, albeit not by much and US futures are similarly down slightly ahead of the opening.
Bond yields are edging higher outside of the UK with Treasuries back up 3bps and most of the continent up around 1bp. Looking at Treasury activity lately, it has been choppy but not trending either higher or lower and sits in the middle of the 3.50% – 4.0% range that has defined trading since September.
Oil prices are little changed this morning and are also hanging about in a range lately as the market tries to determine the supply/demand function. Is China growing enough to increase demand substantially? How much oil is Iran getting into the market? These are the questions that have no clear answers so visibility into trends is limited. Meanwhile, gold got clobbered yesterday on dollar strength and the base metals had a similar response.
Finally, the dollar remains stronger rather than weaker overall, rallying yesterday against most of its counterparts and holding the bulk of those gains. Today’s outlier is KRW (-0.9%) which suffered after the release of its export data showed a 12.5% decline of exports to China. In truth, this bodes ill for both currencies, the won and the renminbi, which saw the offshore version trade through 7.20 last night for the first time in this move. As I have written before, this has further to go.
There is no data today so basically, all eyes will be on the tape at 10:00 to hear what Powell has to say and how he responds to the questions. For now, the market is losing conviction that another rate hike is coming, although there is no indication from Fed speakers that they have changed their view. Next week, we will see the PCE data, and I suspect much will depend on how that prints before any new views can be expressed. In the meantime, the dollar is caught between a sense of risk-off and a sense the Fed may be done. Choppy is the name of the game.
Good luck
Adf