Inflation: Early Innings But Fed Down to Its Last Out

This article was originally published on ETFTrends.com.

By Jan van Eck
Chief Executive Officer

A digital asset, lithium battery and hawkish Federal Reserve walk into a bar—stop us if you’ve heard this one. See why recent events have strengthened our conviction in our top themes of 2022.

At the start of the year, we believed these three themes would shape the investment world in 2022: the Federal Reserve (Fed) will hurt—not crash—the markets, wait to buy growth, and buy commodity equities. With almost four months in the books, our views remain in place, and if anything, recent events have accelerated trends that are strengthening our conviction. While Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has dominated markets more recently, we believe this turmoil reinforces the transformational potential of these themes and has shed light on the structural instability of existing markets.

Fed’s Tight Rope Act: Wages are Key to Taming Inflation

The Fed has little control over today’s goods inflation, driven by supply-chain, COVID stimulus and war. We are keeping our eyes on wage inflation, which will be clearer in the second half of this year. Wage pressures can become stickier and harder to reduce. Persistent wage inflation is really bad for financial markets.

Here’s some background. The correlation between wages and inflation has historically spiked during periods of high inflation, and continued upward pressure on wages may contribute to higher inflation.

Strong Relationship Between Wages and Inflation

U.S. Federal Debt to GDP and Short-Term Interest Rates and Economic Decline
U.S. Federal Debt to GDP and Short-Term Interest Rates and Economic Decline

Rolling 3-year correlations of the 3-year averages of U.S CPI Urban Consumers to U.S. Unit Labor Costs Non-Farm Business Sector.

Source: Bloomberg. Data as of March 2022.

Prior to the unexpected shock of COVID-19, the Fed was still in the process of unwinding the “extraordinary and unprecedented” measures it used to fight the 2008 crisis. For the last decade, the fear was that the lack of rate hikes since 2008 would make dealing with the next crisis that much harder. The last attempt to “normalize” interest rates was from 2015 to 2018, and the Fed was only able to reach 2.5% before the markets revolted. Now, stuck between soaring inflation and the potential for economic malaise, the Fed has little wiggle room to maneuver.

Every time the Fed has increased rates to fight inflation historically, unemployment has increased. The last time we faced inflation of this magnitude was the 1970s. The Fed raised interest rates dramatically, and the resulting shock caused the US unemployment rate to reach 10.7% in 1982, which was higher than unemployment in 2008.