Will Inflation Look Different In 2022?

 | Dec 13, 2021 11:20AM ET

One swallow doesn't make a summer, but when it comes to slower inflation pressure, there have been several. Will the narrative change soon?

While Fed Chair Jerome Powell had been preaching his “transitory” doctrine for months, the thesis was obliterated once again after the headline Consumer Price Index surged by 6.8% year-over-year (YoY) on Dec. 10. Additionally, while the commodity Producer Price Index (PPI) – which will be released on Dec. 14 – is likely provide a roadmap for inflation’s next move, signs of deceleration are already upon us.

For example, supply bottlenecks, port congestion and rapidly rising commodity prices helped underwrite inflation’s ascent. However, with those factors now stagnant or reversing, inflationary pressures should decelerate in 2022.

To explain, Deutsche Bank (DE:DBKGn) presented several charts that highlight 2021’s inflationary problems. However, whether it’s suppliers’ delivery times, backlogs of work, port congestion, bottleneck indices, or the cost of shipping and trucking, several inflationary indicators (excluding air cargo rates) have already peaked and rolled over.

Please see below: