Global Inflation: The Trend Is Finally Rising

 | Jan 30, 2018 12:18AM ET

Approximately nine years ago, I founded a company specializing in developing new ways to invest in and hedge against inflation. I originally had two partners; one left after a few months and the other lasted a year before heading back to a Wall Street job. (I think leaving after 3 months of trying a startup was a little sporty, but I don’t begrudge the partner who stuck it out for a full calendar turn and then some.)

The last nine years have been a difficult time to be developing and marketing inflation expertise. While we conceived the firm as having strategic positioning on inflation protection – whether inflation is going up or down, inflation risk is always there to be managed…and we are all born inflation-exposed, and remain so unless we do something about it – I confess that I underestimated how hard of a pitch that would be to investors who haven’t seen core inflation above 3% for two decades. Unless you have a certain amount of grey hair, you think 3% is high inflation, but that’s not really high enough to damage most asset markets. So why bother?

But times, they are a changin’ back (as Bob Roberts famously sang). Average core inflation around the world is near the highest levels since the 1990s. The chart below shows the unweighted average of the US, Europe, Japan, the UK, and Chinese core inflation (using median for the US, which is a better measure). While the average of 1.7% or so is nothing to be terrified about, it also should be noted that there is nothing evident on the horizon that would tend to arrest this rising trend.