Is Inflation Looming?

Economic Blog Posted by lplresearch

12/11/2020

The November reading for the Consumer Price Index (CPI), the most well-known measure of inflation, was released Thursday, December 12, and while both the headline and “core” readings (excluding food and energy) came in slightly higher than the Bloomberg-surveyed economists’ consensus, core inflation remains tame at 1.6% over the trailing year. Inflation is likely to pick up as the economy improves and may run a little hotter than we’ve seen in recent years in 2021, but we believe the risks of a substantial inflation surprise over the next year is limited.

“Congress and the Fed provided massive stimulus this year and it seems like that should be inflationary,” said LPL Chief Market Strategist Ryan Detrick, “but it’s important to remember that the stimulus was there to fill a giant hole from lost wages and an economy running well below its potential.”

As shown in today’s LPL Chart of the Day, core inflation on a trailing-year basis still has some catching up to do, although the one-month reading is now largely consistent with pre-Covid levels. inflation over the last decade has remained subdued and largely steady.

View enlarged chart.

INFLATION MAY RUN HOTTER

Core inflation has not hit 2.5% since 2008 and hasn’t hit 3% since 1996. Both levels may be reachable toward the middle of next year due to the short-lived inflation spike in June, July, and August 2020 as prices normalized, and may remain somewhat elevated as the economy recovers while the Federal Reserve likely keeps rates low. A falling dollar also tends to be inflationary, making foreign goods more expensive and COVID-19 could also create some supply chain disruptions, which may temporarily lift inflation.

FORCES THAT MAY HELP KEEP INFLATION IN CHECK

At the same time, there’s reason to believe inflation may have a ceiling in the 2.5 –3% range:

  • The conditions that limited economic growth, and inflation with it, before COVID are still in play. Workforce growth is slowing, populations are aging, especially in developed economies, and productivity gains have been limited despite strength in some areas of the economy.
  • Wage pressure is likely to be limited as long as there’s still slack in the labor market.
  • The economy may continue to have spare capacity until it returns to long-term potential growth levels.
  • Technological developments and increased use of green energy sources has steadily lowered the energy intensity of economic growth, decreasing the likelihood of energy supply shocks.
  • Inflation historically bottoms early-to-mid expansion and only becomes a threat later in the business cycle.

We are likely to see trailing-year inflation numbers in the middle of next year that we haven’t seen in a while, but the monthly run rate will probably be less elevated. We do think we’ll see inflation run hotter than it has in recent years, but after years of central banks failing to push inflation towards 2%, we don’t yet see the kind of structural shift that could lead to inflation becoming a serious economic risk looking out over the next year.

IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES

This material is for general information only and is not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual. There is no assurance that the views or strategies discussed are suitable for all investors or will yield positive outcomes. Investing involves risks including possible loss of principal. Any economic forecasts set forth may not develop as predicted and are subject to change.

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All index and market data from FactSet and MarketWatch.

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