Changes in futures markets have shown that investors are starting to accept the Fed’s message that
cooling inflation will take more time. Investors are betting on a more extended period of higher interest rates as they begin to get the message from US Federal Reserve officials that more time is needed to cool inflation in the face of a resilient labour market. Futures markets show that investors expect rates to peak slightly above 5 per cent in July, with only one interest rate cut by the year-end. As recently as last week, they had been expecting a peak of about 5 per cent in May, with two rate cuts by the end of 2023.
The shift came after a blockbuster employment report that showed the labour market surged by half a million jobs in January. Investors have for months been betting that a rapid deceleration in inflation would allow the Fed to cut interest rates as soon as the fourth quarter of this year, despite the insistence of central bank officials that they had no plans to do so. The shift in interest rate expectations takes investors closer to the Fed’s official projections that were published in December, although they still underestimate the central bank’s expectation that it will not cut interest rates until at least 2024. « We’re going to need to maintain that for a few years to make sure we get inflation to 2 per cent».
Although US inflation has been trending lower, economists have forecast that in January, the decline will have moderated because of recent persistent price pressures in housing and an uptick in the prices of energy and used cars. Tomorrow’s consumer price index report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics is expected to show annual inflation at 6.2 per cent in January, down from 6.5 per cent the previous month, according to an economists’ forecast compiled by Bloomberg. High rents will have prevented a bigger drop in core inflation, according to Barclays analysts, in addition to higher prices of used cars. Over the longer term, Barclays analysts said they had revised higher their CPI forecasts for the end of 2023 and 2024 because of the continued strength of the US labour market.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported recently that the US added more than half a million jobs in January, roughly triple the number that had been forecast.
The UK’s January inflation figures on Wednesday will also be watched closely by investors and by the Bank of England as it strives to bring inflation back to its target of 2 per cent. Economists polled by Reuters expect UK annual inflation to have slowed to a four-month low of 10.2 per cent. That would mark a decline from 10.5 per cent in December. UK inflation accelerated last year to a peak in October of 11.1 per cent but has slowed since then on the back of lower energy price growth.
Analysts expect average earnings growth, excluding bonuses, to have accelerated to 6.5 per cent in December, compared with 6.4 per cent in the previous month. Strong wage growth and higher inflation than expected could call into question the slowdown in the pace of the monetary tightening forecast at the next meeting on March 23. Markets are pricing in a 0.25 percentage point rise after the bank lifted rates by 0.5 percentage points earlier this month but signalled that it might soon have finished tightening.
The release of robust economic data after the lunar new year holiday has spurred investor confidence that China’s economy is recovering after zero-Covid restrictions were lifted in December, with the benchmark CSI 300 index rising more than 6.25 per cent year to date. Analysts say that robust inflows are likely to continue, with US growth expected to slow and retail investors yet to join the fray. «Flows could still benefit the financial market if confidence returns and households opt for not only ‘revenge spending’, but also ‘revenge risk-taking’,» the analysts said.
It will surely take a good amount of time to get inflation to 2 per cent. It's best to keep expectations in check and not fall for wishful thinking.
ReplyDeleteGood to see most investors finally getting the message the US Federal Reserve has been putting out for some time. This will take time especially since the labour market is so resilient.
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