The consumer-price index report for January, which was released on Wednesday, was expected by traders and investors to show little change from or a modest improvement over the last month of 2024. However, one segment of the financial sector kept showing concerning indications of potential price increases.
According to statistics from FactSet, the five-year breakeven inflation rate, which gauges average projected inflation over the medium term, was 2.6% on Tuesday and has mostly stayed above its 50- and 200-day moving averages since late October. Its present message is that inflation may continue to rise for years above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target.
Tim Magnusson, chief investment officer and founding partner at Garda Capital Partners in Wayzata, Minnesota, stated, “It is not out of the question that inflation could stay well above the Fed’s 2% target for the months or even years to come, even though I don’t think we’ll see inflation go back to levels we witnessed in 2021–2023. This opinion seems to be supported by recent consumer expectations statistics from the University of Michigan, which he mentioned. “This would obviously keep the Fed on hold if it turns out to be the case.”
Financial markets could tremble and Federal Reserve officials could take note if Wednesday’s data contained even a slight upside surprise. Any positive surprise would cause this number to soar to 3% or higher for the first time since June 2024, since inflation speculators already anticipate that January’s annual headline CPI inflation rate would be 2.9%.
A path of persistently persistent inflation is typically anticipated by inflation traders, which should maintain the annual headline rate at 2.9% from June to November. The stakes are only going to get higher when it’s unclear which of President Donald Trump’s promises will really be implemented.
In the meantime, Wall Street Journal-surveyed experts predict that January’s annual headline CPI inflation rate and the more condensed year-over-year core rate would fall little from December’s 2.9% and 3.2% to 2.8% and 3.1%, respectively. It is anticipated that the monthly core reading would stay at 0.3%.
In his first day of semiannual testimony before Congress, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell made some remarks that didn’t seem to have much of an impact on market participants’ perceptions of inflation. Powell stated on Tuesday that there is no need to change interest rates immediately and that it is still unclear whether of Trump’s tariff plans would be carried out.
After rising for four consecutive sessions, the 10-year rate BX:TMUBMUSD10Y ended the day at about 4.54%, the highest level of Treasury yields in at least a week. In the meantime, the DJIA SPX COMP stocks ended the day mixed.
According to Mark Heppenstall, chief investment officer at Penn Mutual Asset Management in Pennsylvania, investors may wish to fade any big market-moving reactions in the bond market to Wednesday’s data, as the 10-year yield may be settling into a new range around 4.5%.
“There’s just going to be back and forth on everything coming out of the administration, with some days being favorable and some days being negative,” Heppenstall said by phone. “I don’t expect yields to fall dramatically,” he stated, adding that “a risk-off environment is just going to limit how high yields can go.”
Additionally, he mentioned a “embedded inflationary mindset” that seemed to be gaining traction. “To some degree, people are still struggling with how quickly inflation went to 9% in 2022,” he stated. As a result, “there’s still a little bit of sticker shock left over from the 2021-22 inflation spike, and that is the biggest frustration.” In some regions of the country, a box of Cheerios costs $9.
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