Last Week This Morning
Inflation
Core PCE came in at its lowest level in two years, 3.9%. A year ago, it was 5.5%.
More importantly, the monthly Core PCE came in at its lowest level since November 2020. At 0.14%, that annualizes at 1.68%. That’s cheating, however, and economists would say, “take the last three monthly reports and annualize those.” Cool, will do.
0.14%
0.22%
0.17%
= 2.12% Core PCE
I totally get the argument that surging oil will push up inflation, but keep in mind two things:
The Penn State/ACY Core PCE Inflation Rate decreased from July to August, from 2.056% to 1.745%. The BEA Core PCE inflation rate also decreased from 4.291% to 3.876%. In the graph below:
Red line: government Core PCE (with the shelter component lag)
Blue line: PSU’s Alternative (which tries to account for the lag)
A shallow recession will likely not force the Fed to cut. The decision to cut will be driven by one of three factors:
Economic contraction is a feature, not a bug, of 5%+ rate hikes in one year. That alone won’t cause the Fed to cut.
10 Year Treasury
When even my grandmother believes the 10 Year Treasury yield is headed to 5%, I start wondering if the move is overdone. Tough to envision right now, but there have been three different instances in the last year where the 10T dropped 0.50%+ in two weeks. It’s not impossible that the 10T finishes October at 4%.
That being said, Treasury supply will make it harder for rates to plunge until the market has swallowed the government’s deficit, and that will take a few more months. For that reason, positioning is unabashedly for higher rates right now.
Real 10 Year Rates are at 2.25%, the highest level since the financial crisis. Anyone 35 and under has never experienced rates this restrictive before.
Upper bound resistance: 4.72%, then 5%
Lower bound resistance: 4.35%, then 4%
Week Ahead
With the government staying open, we will continue to get eco data for now. That means we still get the most important economic data point in the universe – that JOLTS tho!
Then the boring old labor report Friday and about 8,000 Fed speeches.