Inflation is Dead

For anyone who’s ever doubted
Inflation is falling and touted
The price of their food
Or Natgas and crude
The market has recently shouted

Inflation is dead, can’t you see?
The CPI’s back down to three
Soon Jay and the Fed
Will clearly have said
It’s time to cut rates, we agree

Another day, another soft inflation reading, two of them, actually.  First, the UK reported that CPI there fell to 4.6% in October, its lowest point in two years and a bit below expectations.  While that was quite a sharp decline from the September print of 6.7%, things there are still a bit problematic as the core rate remains much higher, at 5.7%, and is not declining at anywhere near the same rate as the headline.  What this tells us is that the energy component is a big driver as the price of oil is down about 10% in the past month.

Then, US PPI printed with the M/M number at -0.5%, much softer than expected which took the Y/Y down to 1.3%.  Core PPI is a bit higher, 2.4% Y/Y, but obviously, at a level that is not seen as a major problem.  Meanwhile, Retail Sales was released at a slightly less negative than expected -0.1% and last month’s print was revised up to 0.9%, the indication being that economic activity is not collapsing yet.  For the optimists, this has all the earmarks of a soft landing, declining inflation, modest growth, and still relatively strong employment.  As well for the optimists, they are all in on the idea that not only has the Fed, and every other central bank, finished their rate hiking cycle, but that rate cuts are coming soon!

In fact, that is the clear narrative this morning, rate hikes are dead, long live rate cuts.  There are numerous takes on this particular subject, but the general view is that now that inflation is finally heading back toward target, the central bank community will need to cut rates to prevent destruction in economic activity.  Europe is already teetering on the edge, if not currently in recession, and though GDP in Q3 here in the US printed at a robust 4.7%, Q4 appears to be slowing down somewhat with the latest GDPNow estimate at 2.2%.  However, given that growth in the US remains far better than many anticipated considering the speed and magnitude of the Fed’s rate hikes, my question is, why would the Fed cut?  At this point, there is limited evidence in the data that the economy is going to fall into recession, and based on their models, strong growth is likely to be inflationary, so maintaining the current levels should be fine.

At any rate, that is the crux of the bull/bear argument these days, and for now, the bulls are leading the dialog.  Equity markets continue to buy into that narrative as evidenced not just by Tuesday’s powerful rally, but the fact that yesterday saw a continuation of those gains, albeit at a much more muted pace.  Now, Asian markets didn’t really participate last night, with Japanese shares modestly lower but Chinese shares, especially the Hang Seng (-1.4%) suffering more broadly.  The data from China continues to show that the property market is crumbling, with home prices reported declining further last month despite Xi’s government pumping more money into the sector.  That is a bubble that is going to haunt President Xi for a very long time.  As to European bourses, they are mixed this morning with some (Germany and Spain) modestly firmer while others (UK and France) are modestly softer.  It is hard to get a read from this, especially given there has been no data released this morning.  Finally, US futures are ever so slightly softer at this hour (7:10), maybe on the order of -0.2%.  However, this seems a lot like a consolidation rather than a major retracement.

The bond market story, though, is probably more inciteful with regard to the overall narrative.  Given the softer inflation data, and the fact that futures and swaps markets are now pricing in the first interest rate cuts by May and 100bps of cuts over 2024, interest rates are still the key focus.  You will remember that in the wake of the CPI number, 10yr yields crashed 20bps.  Yesterday they did rebound a bit, rising 10bps at one point in the day before closing higher by about 7bp at 4.54%.  this morning, though, they are slipping back again, lower by 5bps as that 4.50% level remains the market’s trading pivot.  We are seeing similar yield declines throughout Europe as well, with investors there embracing the slowing inflation story.  In fact, UK yields are down 8bps this morning continuing the positive inflation story there.

Interestingly, the oil market is not embracing the goldilocks narrative as oil prices are softer again this morning, -0.75%, and have no real life in them.  Yesterday we did see EIA data describe a much larger than expected inventory build, and the US continues to pump out record amounts of oil, 13mm bbl/day, so in the short run, there is clearly ample supply.  Do not be surprised to see other OPEC members discuss voluntary production cuts in the near future.  On the other hand, gold and silver continue to rally, taking their cue from lower interest rates and the weaker dollar while this morning, the base metals are little changed.  One thing to remember is that if we truly are in a new, declining interest rate regime, look for the dollar to fall, and all the metals to rally.

Speaking of the dollar, it is very slightly firmer overall this morning, but remains well below levels seen prior to the CPI print on Tuesday.  In the G10, AUD (-0.4%) and NZD (-0.8%) are the laggards with the rest of the bloc seeing much smaller price action.  But, to demonstrate that things seem to be heading back to pre-CPI levels, USDJPY is back firmly above 151, although has not yet threatened the apparent line in the sand at 152.  In the EMG bloc, the story is far more mixed with KRW (+0.7%) seemingly benefitting from the warmer tone between Presidents Biden and Xi at yesterday’s APEC meeting, while ZAR (-0.7%) is suffering on the back of signs the economy there is slowing more rapidly based on construction activity reports.  The big picture remains that the dollar should continue to follow US yields broadly.  This means that if the Fed really is done and that cuts are coming, the dollar is going to fall further.  This is especially true if they start cutting before inflation is truly under control.  This is the key risk which we will need to watch going forward.

On the data front, today brings the weekly Initial (exp 220K) and Continuing (1847K) Claims data as well as the Philly Fed Manufacturing Index (-9.0).  Later we will see IP (-0.3%) and Capacity Utilization (79.4%) and we hear from four more Fed speakers before the day is through.  So far, the cacophony of Fedspeak has not wavered from the Powell idea that higher for longer is the game plan and that they will not hesitate to raise rates if they feel it is necessary.  Not one of them has cracked and acknowledged that rate cuts may happen next year, so keep an eye for that.

However, absent a Fed slip of the tongue, I suspect that today will be relatively quiet although this bullish equity/bullish bond/bearish dollar move does seem to have legs.  With the big data now behind us, until GDP and PCE at the end of the month, my take is the bulls are going to push as hard as they can.  Be prepared.

Good luck

Adf