Weekly Inflation Outlook: CPI Reading To Test Market’s Current Inflation Pricing

 | Jul 11, 2022 06:32AM ET

  • This week’s CPI report may see another “peak” in CPI. That’s actually the good news
  • The bad news is that due to easy comparisons, further peaks may be ahead – even in core inflation
  • To date, Fed action has had no perceptible impact on lowering inflation
  • As I pointed out last week, market pricing suggests great confidence in financial markets that inflation will collapse back to the Fed’s target. Of course, market prices do not technically reflect risk-neutral expectations as much as they reflect where risk clears. However, since most market participants (certainly, anyone who is naturally long stocks and bonds and has real liabilities) are inherently short inflation risk, one would think that market prices should clear higher than arm’s length expectations.

    It is hard to believe that’s the case, but in any event, I think it’s fair to say that markets are being generous about the inflation outlook as we advance. This week will see another real-time test of the thesis that inflation pressures are contained or that they aren’t running away from us.

    The CPI report on Wednesday will supposedly mark the peak of y/y headline inflation… haven’t we heard that before?

    The consensus estimate is for 1.1% m/m in headline inflation and +0.6% m/m in core inflation, bringing the y/y figures to 8.8% and 5.8%, respectively. The interbank market for the monthly print is actually slightly higher than that. The core number seems to be well past its peak—it was 6.0% y/y as of last month, and the peak in March was 6.47%.

    I think the consensus for core CPI of 0.6% seems reasonable, given that Primary and Owners’ Equivalent Rent will still be strong. For all the hand-wringing about how home prices and rents are overdone, there is no sign of serious weakness in pricing in these markets. As Bill McBride points out in his CalculatedRisk newsletter, the . There may be moderation on the horizon, but it is too early for that. We’ve also heard many predictions about the coming collapse in new and used car prices back to their old levels. That’s not going to happen, but the rate of change will slow. Still, that’s not a serious drag to this number yet. As I said, I think 0.6% on core seems reasonable.

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    On the other hand, the headline number of +1.1% m/m, or +1.2% if you use the interbank market, seems a little high. Gasoline was up roughly 10% m/m in June over May, which means roughly 25-35bps of premium over core. If I made monthly point forecasts, something around 0.9% or 1.0% on the headline would be my forecast.

    I know that 1.1% and 0.6% sound like bad news. Unfortunately, that was the good news.

    The bad news is that the favorable comparisons to 2021, which led to predictions of an inflation peak in the first place, are now behind us for a while. Here are the ‘comps’ for the next few months, starting with this month: