Inflation Monitor: Higher Costs and Weaker Demand?
Summary
Market Implications
Negative February CPI Surprise
Headline and core CPI were below consensus (Table 1, Chart 1). The surprise was small. MoM core CPI at 23bp was only 3bp below a number that would have rounded up to the consensus of 0.3%. Sam’s model’s predicted a small upside surprise.
The slowdown mainly reflected a decline in core services inflation ex housing (Table 2):
Rising Inflation Expectations
Market-based and survey-based inflation expectations have generally been rising or remain high.
Tariffs to Increase Cost Pressures
The introduction of tariffs is likely to boost already emerging cost pressures. Tariffs are not included in the Import Price Index but are likely to lift PPI and CPI as importers, wholesalers, and retailers pass on the cost increases to customers. I think this will have a one-round impact (i.e., a price level impact rather than triggering an increase in inflation depends on businesses’ market power, i.e., economic slack (or the lack of it).
Demand Pressures Could Abate
Currently, evidence exists of demand pressures. However, the administration’s policies have seen a surge in uncertainty that is starting to weaken demand. Continued high policy uncertainty is likely to see demand pressures abate.
The prospects for fiscal consolidation remain uncertain, which suggest limited downside risks to demand from fiscal policy (Chart 18).
Inflation Trends Stable or Rising
On balance, measures of inflation trends point more at stabilization or at upside risks than at downside risks.
Market Consequences
In my last Inflation Monitor, I listed several demand and cost pressures. However, since then the administration’s policies have increased upside risks to costs and downside risks to demand, with a mixed impact on inflation.
The administration’s tariff hikes are likely to raise costs. Deregulation could lower costs to businesses, but it seems more likely to come after the tariff hikes. So far, the administration has been much more focused on the latter than the former.
In addition, the administration has generated so much uncertainty that household and business spending has started weakening. The administration is implementing tariffs in an abrupt and unpredictable manner that maximises their negative impact on the US economy. So far, the damage is not irreversible. confidence can be restored, and consumption, employment and investment plans can still return to their pre-inauguration trajectory.
Chair Powell was likely referring to these factors in his 7 March speech when stating, ‘the net effect of the administration policy changes that will matter for the economy and for the path of monetary policy.’
I assume rationality will prevail and that the administration will soon course correct, implement its policies in a more predictable manner and restore confidence and keep growth on the current, high trajectory. On that basis, I maintain my call for no Fed cuts in 2025.
However, if the administration persists with its destabilizing statements, I will lower my growth forecast and change my Fed call.
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