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US inflation came in hot overnight. It is worth noting that while there are some positive signs for goods, services inflation is getting worse. See the tables below:

Food inflation

Energy Inflation

Goods Inflation

Services Inflation

Rent Inflation

Given some technicalities in calculating rent inflation, services inflation is unlikely to decline quickly.  

How should we look at inflation reversion?

There are two ways to consider reversion:

1. While central banks will force inflation back to 2%, prices will remain structurally higher. 

2. Prices have been temporarily shocked, but will return to the prior trend 

Goods are probably more likely to be in the second category, services more likely to be in the first. Given the Ukraine war, gas prices are likely to be in the first category. Oil is more transportable, and so probably has a chance for either. 

The shape of future inflation or deflation depends on how many things you think will fit into each profile.

Going forward

The nowcast from the Cleveland Fed is for another 8%+ print next month.

Inflation Nowcast

The way the maths are at the moment, annual inflation is going to remain high for some time. Say you were expecting imminent deflation in many categories. If the US started printing -0.7% per month inflation every month from November, annualised inflation would still be above 2% until March 2023.    

So choose your path. My expectation is that central banks want to jump up and down a few times on the corpse of inflation to make sure that it is truly dead before reversing course. With that in mind, I'm expecting very low inflation or deflation by mid-2023. But, even with that expectation, the headline annual inflation figure will stay high for at least six months. Which is just another reason why central banks are less likely to ease up on inflation any time soon.   

 

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Damien Klassen
Post by Damien Klassen
October 14, 2022
Damien has a wealth of experience across international equities (Schroders), asset allocation (Wilson HTM) and he helped create one of Australia’s largest independent research firm, Aegis Equities. He lectured for over a decade at the Securities Institute, Finsia and Kaplan and spent many of those years as the external Chair for the subject of Industrial Equity Analysis. Damien runs the investment side of Nucleus Wealth, selecting stocks suggested by analysts and implementing the asset allocation. Damien started Nucleus Wealth after 20+ years in financial markets. He wanted to come up with an investment solution for ordinary investors that delivers the same types of personalised investment portfolios high net worth investors use.