Does The Return Of The Reflation Trade Have Legs?

 | Dec 03, 2020 07:16AM ET

The Treasury market’s inflation forecast broke above its pre-pandemic high this week, fueling speculation that a new era of firmer pricing pressure is dawning. Maybe, but there are still good reasons to remain cautious before declaring that inflation is at a critical turning point. There’s a case for reviving the pre-pandemic outlook for roughly 2% inflation, but expecting a substantially hotter run still relies heavily on guesswork and dismissing the secular trends — an aging demographic, disinflationary pressure via technology, and other factors — that have prevailed over the past 20 years.

In the grand scheme of inflation analytics, the yield spread between nominal less inflation-indexed Treasuries is a popular bellwether of Mr. Market’s real-time expectations, but it’s hardly flawless. Using the market’s implied inflation estimate via 5-year maturities, for example, has had its issues over the years relative to official inflation statistics. The biggest gap was in 2008, when the market priced in a hefty bout of deflation. The annual pace of the core Consumer Price Index eased substantially but never went negative.