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An oft-repeated mantra from the Trump regime is that tariffs in Trump’s first term barely affected inflation. Which is true.

But the inflation environment was very different. The latest inflation data was out at the end of last week, and while it may have beaten expectations, it is not the type of inflation numbers that you would want to see before one of the largest tariff increases ever.

The other highlight: the below-expected services inflation was largely driven by a large decline in travel-related services. Airlines, hotels and car rentals all saw big price falls over the month.

2010 – 2020 US Inflation

Central banks spent most of the 2010-2020 period cutting rates to stimulate inflation and failing.

Now, not only are we (probably) looking at higher levels of tariffs, but the US inflation environment is considerably different.

The US has an inflation target of 2%. For the decade before the pandemic, it achieved this roughly from:

  • 2% food inflation split between 1% food cost inflation and 3% inflation on packaged food and restaurants.
  • 0% energy inflation
  • 0% goods inflation
  • 3% housing inflation
  • 2.5% services inflation

Basically, anything that benefitted from more trade and globalisation (food, energy, goods) had 0-1% inflation. Anything related to services had 2.5-3% inflation.

Latest US Inflation: high level

Broadly we are looking at:

  • 3-4% food inflation, similarly split between food cost inflation and packaged food/restaurants.
  • Rampant deflation in energy commodities, rampant inflation in energy services
  • 0% goods inflation over 12 months, but 1.7% annualised over the last 3 months
  • 3-4% housing inflation, continuing to fall
  • 3% services inflation, mostly higher in recent months except for a crash in travel-related prices

Latest US Inflation: detailed

 

 

 

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Damien Klassen
Post by Damien Klassen
April 13, 2025
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.