Earth Inflation Day
-
bookmark
-
print
- Keywords:
- inflation
The last thing a central bank wants to see is inflation becoming headline news. In their ideal world, CPI is a small, one-paragraph item on page 5 of the business section (or about the 61st story on the newsfeed), providing a few terse details on the latest one-tick move and read only by some lonely souls who don’t get outdoors much and perhaps study the economy for a living. Suffice it to say that 2022 is not turning out to be their ideal world—to wit, the March CPI result was the top news story on all the Canadian national newscasts and number one on the newsfeed this past Wednesday, crowding out the war in Ukraine, the pandemic, and a homegrown Jeopardy star. Not ideal at all.
Almost a year ago, we warned about the coming earthquake for inflation, and how central banks and the consensus were far underestimating the risks for a sustained bout of uncomfortably high price pressures. But even we have been blown away by how far inflation has risen in that year. Remarkably, Canada’s outsized 6.7%
y/y headline inflation rate is below the median pace in the industrialized world, with the U.S. at 8.5%, the Euro Area at 7.4%, Britain at 7.0%, and New Zealand at 6.9%. A wide range of developing economies are even higher. Even Japan is reporting 1.2% headline inflation, the highest in more than three years (hey, you have to walk before you run). Canadian producer prices also surged 4% m/m in March (and a towering 18.4% y/y), the largest monthly advance in the 66-year history of the series—that’s a lot of history.
The issue for central banks is that the blazing headline increases, and the garish publicity surrounding them, run the very real risk of destabilizing inflation expectations. On-the-ground intel finds that conversations among relatives and friends (non-economists; yes, we have a few), have suddenly morphed from swapping stories about how much house X down the street sold for (“Can you believe it? Ridiculous!”) to how much product Y has risen since the last purchase (“Can you believe it? Outrageous!”). Not surprisingly, consumer inflation expectations are gradually climbing. And, note that the implied 10-year breakeven inflation rate in Treasuries hit 3% this week, while the 5-year forward rate climbed to an eight-year high of almost 2.7%.
Accordingly, the messaging from central banks is continuing to ratchet higher. Chair Powell said on Thursday that the Fed will move “expeditiously” to get rates back to neutral (or about 200 bps north of where we stand today). He all but sealed the deal on a 50 bp step on May 4, albeit dampening speculation of a 75 bp hike—as mooted by James Bullard earlier in the week—at least for now. Curiously, BoC Governor Macklem did nothing to quash chatter of a possible 75 bp hike, by suggesting “nothing is off the table” on the same day. A fair question to pose that if truly dramatic action is required, why stop at 75? Why not 100? And, why wait for a meeting? After all, when rates were being slashed during the opening days of the pandemic, no one was waiting for meetings, and the Fed wasn’t constrained by 50 bp steps. We lean to the view that nothing so dramatic is in the offing—yet—and still look for a series of 50 bp hikes by both. Having said that, the next round of inflation readings in the coming month is critical, to gauge whether the March spike in commodities seeped into even more spaces in April.
Markets are still taking on board the reality of just how much work the central banks still need to do, and how fast they need to do it. It seems like every time we are nearing peak hawkishness, an even uglier inflation report lands on the doorstep, and the hill gets higher. Bond yields pushed notably northward again this week, in a distinctly bearish flattening fashion. The biggest mover was Canadian short rates, on the combo of the CPI and 75 bp chatter, lifting 2-year yields roughly 30 bps to 2.7%. While the closely watched 2s10s curve remains positive, it narrowed heavily this week, to +18-20 bps in both the U.S. and Canada from 34-37 bps just a week ago.
Long-term yields managed to back off a bit late in the week, in part due to some softening in oil prices (WTI dipped back to $102). Still, this week’s sell-off saw a variety of milestones hit in bond markets, and not just in North America. Here is but a small sampling of some of the most notable:
- The 10-year real Treasury yield briefly turned positive for the first time since the early days of the pandemic, and after spending most of the past two years closer to -1%.
- Both 5- and 7-year Treasury yields touched 3% this week, or just shy of decade-highs for both.
- Canadian 5-year GoCs poked above 2.85%, north of the prior cycle’s peak and the highest in more than 10 years. These important yields are now up 190 bps in a year, the fastest y/y rise since 1995.
- German 10-year yields, after just turning positive in February, are now nearing 1%.
- Japanese 10-year yields, after being pinned near zero for years, are straining the BoJ’s 0.25% target.
Equities are glancing nervously over their shoulder at bonds’ behaviour. The TSX fell 2% on the week, but not before testing an intraday high earlier on Wednesday. And, thanks to its hearty resource sectors, the index is still clinging to a modest gain for the year. The S&P 500 eased 1.5%, and remains down 9% this year—and below both the 50- and 200-day MA. Yet it’s still above its pre-invasion level. But it’s the high-multiple Nasdaq that is suffering the most from the grinding rise in yields, as well as a few specific issues (e.g., Netflix). The index dropped another 2.7% this week and currently sits 19% below its record high, set just five months ago.
A market that is beginning to show some real interest in the rapidly evolving central bank outlook is foreign exchange. The U.S. dollar has climbed all the way back to pre-pandemic levels against the advanced currencies, and is up 10% from the lows hit just last May. The yen has especially skidded, falling 16% y/y to a 20-year ebb. European currencies have been steadily leaking lower, with the U.K. pound dropping almost 2% in the past week alone, joining its euro cousin. (Oddly, the Russian rouble, while down a bit versus the U.S. dollar in the past year, has actually gained on the crosses, and is about flat since the invasion. Amazing what severe capital controls and a 17% interest rate can accomplish.) Even the Canadian dollar has retreated to a one-month low below 79 cents (or $1.271/US$), despite the hawkish BoC talk. Apparently, even the hottest inflation in 30 years can’t buy you more than a few days of currency gains.
It’s tough to know where to begin looking when an inflation reading so badly overshoots expectations, as did the whopping 1.4% monthly rise in Canada’s CPI. In the past 70 years—aka a pretty long time—there have only been five months with larger increases, and one of those was the introduction of the GST (in Jan/91). While soaring pump prices were the lead factor, even ex-gasoline was up a massive 1.0%. Our pick for #1 star last month was furniture prices, which rose 8.2% in a single month, the highest in records dating back to 1949. Prior to the pandemic, the previously fastest monthly rise was 3.3%.
In some ways, furniture captures all the aspects of the pandemic economy—a raging housing market, soaring demand for goods, rising tariffs and a snarled supply chain. And, as a result, furniture prices have jumped more than 20% since February 2020, after essentially lying flat for 25 years, like a giant beast awoken from a lengthy slumber. Let’s hope this is not emblematic of inflation as a whole.
Douglas Porter
Chief Economist and Managing Director
416-359-4887
Douglas Porter has over 30 years of experience analyzing global economies and financial markets. As Chief Economist at BMO Financial Group and author of the popular…(..)
View Full Profile >The last thing a central bank wants to see is inflation becoming headline news. In their ideal world, CPI is a small, one-paragraph item on page 5 of the business section (or about the 61st story on the newsfeed), providing a few terse details on the latest one-tick move and read only by some lonely souls who don’t get outdoors much and perhaps study the economy for a living. Suffice it to say that 2022 is not turning out to be their ideal world—to wit, the March CPI result was the top news story on all the Canadian national newscasts and number one on the newsfeed this past Wednesday, crowding out the war in Ukraine, the pandemic, and a homegrown Jeopardy star. Not ideal at all.
Almost a year ago, we warned about the coming earthquake for inflation, and how central banks and the consensus were far underestimating the risks for a sustained bout of uncomfortably high price pressures. But even we have been blown away by how far inflation has risen in that year. Remarkably, Canada’s outsized 6.7%
y/y headline inflation rate is below the median pace in the industrialized world, with the U.S. at 8.5%, the Euro Area at 7.4%, Britain at 7.0%, and New Zealand at 6.9%. A wide range of developing economies are even higher. Even Japan is reporting 1.2% headline inflation, the highest in more than three years (hey, you have to walk before you run). Canadian producer prices also surged 4% m/m in March (and a towering 18.4% y/y), the largest monthly advance in the 66-year history of the series—that’s a lot of history.
The issue for central banks is that the blazing headline increases, and the garish publicity surrounding them, run the very real risk of destabilizing inflation expectations. On-the-ground intel finds that conversations among relatives and friends (non-economists; yes, we have a few), have suddenly morphed from swapping stories about how much house X down the street sold for (“Can you believe it? Ridiculous!”) to how much product Y has risen since the last purchase (“Can you believe it? Outrageous!”). Not surprisingly, consumer inflation expectations are gradually climbing. And, note that the implied 10-year breakeven inflation rate in Treasuries hit 3% this week, while the 5-year forward rate climbed to an eight-year high of almost 2.7%.
Accordingly, the messaging from central banks is continuing to ratchet higher. Chair Powell said on Thursday that the Fed will move “expeditiously” to get rates back to neutral (or about 200 bps north of where we stand today). He all but sealed the deal on a 50 bp step on May 4, albeit dampening speculation of a 75 bp hike—as mooted by James Bullard earlier in the week—at least for now. Curiously, BoC Governor Macklem did nothing to quash chatter of a possible 75 bp hike, by suggesting “nothing is off the table” on the same day. A fair question to pose that if truly dramatic action is required, why stop at 75? Why not 100? And, why wait for a meeting? After all, when rates were being slashed during the opening days of the pandemic, no one was waiting for meetings, and the Fed wasn’t constrained by 50 bp steps. We lean to the view that nothing so dramatic is in the offing—yet—and still look for a series of 50 bp hikes by both. Having said that, the next round of inflation readings in the coming month is critical, to gauge whether the March spike in commodities seeped into even more spaces in April.
Markets are still taking on board the reality of just how much work the central banks still need to do, and how fast they need to do it. It seems like every time we are nearing peak hawkishness, an even uglier inflation report lands on the doorstep, and the hill gets higher. Bond yields pushed notably northward again this week, in a distinctly bearish flattening fashion. The biggest mover was Canadian short rates, on the combo of the CPI and 75 bp chatter, lifting 2-year yields roughly 30 bps to 2.7%. While the closely watched 2s10s curve remains positive, it narrowed heavily this week, to +18-20 bps in both the U.S. and Canada from 34-37 bps just a week ago.
Long-term yields managed to back off a bit late in the week, in part due to some softening in oil prices (WTI dipped back to $102). Still, this week’s sell-off saw a variety of milestones hit in bond markets, and not just in North America. Here is but a small sampling of some of the most notable:
- The 10-year real Treasury yield briefly turned positive for the first time since the early days of the pandemic, and after spending most of the past two years closer to -1%.
- Both 5- and 7-year Treasury yields touched 3% this week, or just shy of decade-highs for both.
- Canadian 5-year GoCs poked above 2.85%, north of the prior cycle’s peak and the highest in more than 10 years. These important yields are now up 190 bps in a year, the fastest y/y rise since 1995.
- German 10-year yields, after just turning positive in February, are now nearing 1%.
- Japanese 10-year yields, after being pinned near zero for years, are straining the BoJ’s 0.25% target.
Equities are glancing nervously over their shoulder at bonds’ behaviour. The TSX fell 2% on the week, but not before testing an intraday high earlier on Wednesday. And, thanks to its hearty resource sectors, the index is still clinging to a modest gain for the year. The S&P 500 eased 1.5%, and remains down 9% this year—and below both the 50- and 200-day MA. Yet it’s still above its pre-invasion level. But it’s the high-multiple Nasdaq that is suffering the most from the grinding rise in yields, as well as a few specific issues (e.g., Netflix). The index dropped another 2.7% this week and currently sits 19% below its record high, set just five months ago.
A market that is beginning to show some real interest in the rapidly evolving central bank outlook is foreign exchange. The U.S. dollar has climbed all the way back to pre-pandemic levels against the advanced currencies, and is up 10% from the lows hit just last May. The yen has especially skidded, falling 16% y/y to a 20-year ebb. European currencies have been steadily leaking lower, with the U.K. pound dropping almost 2% in the past week alone, joining its euro cousin. (Oddly, the Russian rouble, while down a bit versus the U.S. dollar in the past year, has actually gained on the crosses, and is about flat since the invasion. Amazing what severe capital controls and a 17% interest rate can accomplish.) Even the Canadian dollar has retreated to a one-month low below 79 cents (or $1.271/US$), despite the hawkish BoC talk. Apparently, even the hottest inflation in 30 years can’t buy you more than a few days of currency gains.
It’s tough to know where to begin looking when an inflation reading so badly overshoots expectations, as did the whopping 1.4% monthly rise in Canada’s CPI. In the past 70 years—aka a pretty long time—there have only been five months with larger increases, and one of those was the introduction of the GST (in Jan/91). While soaring pump prices were the lead factor, even ex-gasoline was up a massive 1.0%. Our pick for #1 star last month was furniture prices, which rose 8.2% in a single month, the highest in records dating back to 1949. Prior to the pandemic, the previously fastest monthly rise was 3.3%.
In some ways, furniture captures all the aspects of the pandemic economy—a raging housing market, soaring demand for goods, rising tariffs and a snarled supply chain. And, as a result, furniture prices have jumped more than 20% since February 2020, after essentially lying flat for 25 years, like a giant beast awoken from a lengthy slumber. Let’s hope this is not emblematic of inflation as a whole.
What to Read Next.
U.S. Inflation: Have We Peaked Yet?
Michael Gregory, CFA | April 15, 2022 | Economic Insights
The CPI increased a massive 1.2% in March, fuelled mostly by energy prices. This hoisted the annual change six-tenths to 8.5% y/y, marking the fastes…
Continue Reading>More Insights
Tell us three simple things to
customize your experience.
Contact Us
Banking products are subject to approval and are provided in the United States by BMO Bank N.A. Member FDIC. BMO Commercial Bank is a trade name used in the United States by BMO Bank N.A. Member FDIC. BMO Sponsor Finance is a trade name used by BMO Financial Corp. and its affiliates.
Please note important disclosures for content produced by BMO Capital Markets. BMO Capital Markets Regulatory | BMOCMC Fixed Income Commentary Disclosure | BMOCMC FICC Macro Strategy Commentary Disclosure | Research Disclosure Statements.
BMO Capital Markets is a trade name used by BMO Financial Group for the wholesale banking businesses of Bank of Montreal, BMO Bank N.A. (member FDIC), Bank of Montreal Europe p.l.c., and Bank of Montreal (China) Co. Ltd, the institutional broker dealer business of BMO Capital Markets Corp. (Member FINRA and SIPC) and the agency broker dealer business of Clearpool Execution Services, LLC (Member FINRA and SIPC) in the U.S. , and the institutional broker dealer businesses of BMO Nesbitt Burns Inc. (Member Canadian Investment Regulatory Organization and Member Canadian Investor Protection Fund) in Canada and Asia, Bank of Montreal Europe p.l.c. (authorised and regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland) in Europe and BMO Capital Markets Limited (authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority) in the UK and Australia and carbon credit origination, sustainability advisory services and environmental solutions provided by Bank of Montreal, BMO Radicle Inc., and Carbon Farmers Australia Pty Ltd. (ACN 136 799 221 AFSL 430135) in Australia. "Nesbitt Burns" is a registered trademark of BMO Nesbitt Burns Inc, used under license. "BMO Capital Markets" is a trademark of Bank of Montreal, used under license. "BMO (M-Bar roundel symbol)" is a registered trademark of Bank of Montreal, used under license.
® Registered trademark of Bank of Montreal in the United States, Canada and elsewhere.
™ Trademark of Bank of Montreal in the United States and Canada.
The material contained in articles posted on this website is intended as a general market commentary. The opinions, estimates and projections, if any, contained in these articles are those of the authors and may differ from those of other BMO Commercial Bank employees and affiliates. BMO Commercial Bank endeavors to ensure that the contents have been compiled or derived from sources that it believes to be reliable and which it believes contain information and opinions which are accurate and complete. However, the authors and BMO Commercial Bank take no responsibility for any errors or omissions and do not guarantee their accuracy or completeness. These articles are for informational purposes only.
This information is not intended to be tax or legal advice. This information cannot be used by any taxpayer for the purpose of avoiding tax penalties that may be imposed on the taxpayer. This information is being used to support the promotion or marketing of the planning strategies discussed herein. BMO Bank N.A. and its affiliates do not provide legal or tax advice to clients. You should review your particular circumstances with your independent legal and tax advisors.
Third party web sites may have privacy and security policies different from BMO. Links to other web sites do not imply the endorsement or approval of such web sites. Please review the privacy and security policies of web sites reached through links from BMO web sites.
Notice to Customers
To help the government fight the funding of terrorism and money laundering activities, federal law (USA Patriot Act (Title III of Pub. L. 107 56 (signed into law October 26, 2001)) requires all financial organizations to obtain, verify and record information that identifies each person who opens an account. When you open an account, we will ask for your name, address, date of birth and other information that will allow us to identify you. We may also ask you to provide a copy of your driver's license or other identifying documents. For each business or entity that opens an account, we will ask for your name, address and other information that will allow us to identify the entity. We may also ask you to provide a copy of your certificate of incorporation (or similar document) or other identifying documents. The information you provide in this form may be used to perform a credit check and verify your identity by using internal sources and third-party vendors. If the requested information is not provided within 30 calendar days, the account will be subject to closure.