U.S. Data Backs Case For 75bp Rate Hike

 | Jul 18, 2022 09:25AM ET

h2 Inflation Fears Show Signs Of Easing

There has been growing speculation over a possible 100bp hike from the Fed later this month following the 9.1% inflation print and the Bank of Canada opting for a surprise 100bp hike. However, we have had quite an array of US numbers this morning, which fit with the notion that a 75bp hike is the most likely outcome of the July 27th FOMC meeting.

The University of Michigan sentiment index is not always as closely followed as other indicators, but the surprise jump in its inflation expectations series last month was seen as the catalyst for the Federal Reserve to opt for a 75bp hike at the June FOMC meeting. Up until that point 50bp was the Fed’s forward guidance, but soon after the number was published journalists received a call to say momentum was shifting.

Today’s report shows both the year ahead and 5-10Y inflation expectations headed lower in July, the former to 5.2% from 5.3% and the latter to 2.8% from 3.1% (consensus 5.3% and 3% respectively). These are important developments as they suggest households are looking through the current period of inflation and have confidence that it will head lower with lower gasoline prices the likely instigator. If this holds then the risk of second-round inflation via higher wages will wane, meaning the Fed will have less work to do.

With regards to inflation, June import price inflation numbers were a lot softer than expected, coming in at 0.2%MoM/10.7%YoY versus 0.7%/11.4% expected. More evidence that dollar strength is acting as a brake on inflation by reducing some pipeline price pressures.