Costs Are Through The Roof. Where To Invest Now?

 | Jun 12, 2022 07:37AM ET

Having grown up in the ‘60s and attended college in the late ’70s, I vividly remember my father telling me, “Cost of everything is going through the roof.”

It was an often-used sentence by people living in the ’70s. That was the last time inflation was this out of control.

Take a look at a sampling of extraordinary year-over-year price increases that consumers are now faced with daily:

Groceries +11.9% (Largest since 1979)
Chicken +17.4%
Restaurants +9% (Largest ever)
Fuel oil +107% (Largest ever)
Electricity +12% (Largest ever)
Rent +5.2% (Largest since 2006)
Airfare +37.8% (Largest since 1987)

h2 Important Market Insight From Friday’s Bear Market Trend Continuation Day /h2

As you probably know, in rational times, the biggest stock and bond investors tend to make their investment decisions based on their view of the earnings outlook 6-12 months in the future rather than what’s happening today. On Friday, many of them changed their view of the future.

To that end, for the better part of a year, in this Market Outlook, we’ve been saying that “something is not quite right.” Mish has also been warning of an upcoming period of worrisome stagflation in her regular TV appearances and in her Mish’s Daily commentary.

Stocks hate stagflation.

In last week’s Market Outlook, Economic Storms Ahead?, we highlighted the same feelings of concern about the economy and inflation being expressed by Janet Yellen and two high-profile CEOs. While these were just “statements” to some, they represent what veteran market participants might call “animal spirits.”

As you just read in the inflation statistics above, it’s easy to see now that there’s a problem with inflation. The next likely hot topic will be GDP growth (or lack thereof). We’ll come back to growth later (below) because Friday’s market pounding was related to inflation more than GDP growth.

When the market faces very bad (i.e., record breaking) news as we’ve experienced for months in the inflation data, forward thinkers (big institutions) begin to look for evidence of a turning point.

When it comes to the inflation problem, one turning point in “Wall Street slang” is “peak inflation.” You may have heard the term discussed in the media as it has become a somewhat popular idea.

As of Thursday of last week, there was a substantial segment of the market that believed that, while inflation was very negative for stocks, it had peaked at 8.3% in last month’s report.

On Friday, the government released May’s inflation data (CPI), and it proved that inflation didn’t peak at the 8.3% level.

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The “inflation has peaked” believers were expecting a better monthly and year-over-year number. The report, however, was a hotter 8.6% YOY number. Even worse, the monthly number was 1.0% versus the estimated 0.60%.

If you do the math, that is an annualized number of approximately 12%.

Friday’s big move lower in the market reflects an unwinding of the widespread belief that inflation had peaked. Considering the very bearish price action, it may take more than one day for the market to digest the unexpected news.

Mish appeared on TD Ameritrade TV on Friday, and she did an outstanding job of explaining that inflation is well above the 12% rate.

The ex-Food & Energy number moderated to 6% annualized inflation. After the CPI data release, I saw a replay of President Biden at a press conference from LA telling the public that ex-food & energy moderated.

Are they kidding?

Who goes through life without Food & Energy?

As my father used to say, “Gasoline and Food costs are going through the roof.”

Remember from above…
Groceries +11.9% (Largest since 1979)
Fuel oil +107% (Largest ever)

More specifically, see the price of gasoline futures below: