Inflation: The Long, Bumpy Ride Ahead

This article was originally published on ETFTrends.com.

By David Schassler
Portfolio Manager and Head of Quantitative Investment Solutions
Van Eck Associates Corporation

A diversified mix of inflation-fighting assets are key to successfully navigating the current inflationary environment.

The U.S Federal Reserve (Fed), and the market overall, may be gradually coming to terms with the inflation problem. Only one short year ago, the Fed wasn’t “thinking about thinking about raising rates.” In March 2021, the Fed indicated that rate hikes were not expected until at least 2024. It is now April 2022, just a year later, and the Fed has already hiked rates by 0.25% and now anticipates six more rate increases in 2022. This is in addition to anticipation of the Fed rapidly shrinking its balance sheet. While the U-turn was drastic, this pivot is totally appropriate given the inflationary pressures.

We believe the chances that the Fed will be successful in pulling this off without wreaking havoc on the economy are extremely low. The chart below demonstrates the Fed’s track record for fighting inflation. In all events since 1970, raising interest rates to combat inflation resulted in rising unemployment. We are now contending with the worst bout of inflation since the 1970s. During that period, the tightening process to combat inflation resulted in an unemployment rate of 10.7%. That level exceeded the unemployment rate during the Global Financial Crisis of 2008!

Rates vs. Unemployment

Rates vs. Unemployment
Rates vs. Unemployment

Data as of April 7, 2022. Source: Bloomberg. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.

The chart below demonstrates that the yield curve recently inverted. This is signaling that the market anticipates that the Fed will pause on tightening next year. Embedded within that is the assumption that the Fed will be successful in taming inflation while maintaining negative real interest rates—which, by the way, has no historical precedent. Stagflation is the more likely outcome.

Yield Curve Inverts

Yield Curve Inverts
Yield Curve Inverts

Data as of April 7, 2022. Source: Bloomberg and The National Bureau of Economic Research. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine only makes a bad situation worse. The chart below demonstrates that, historically, wars have coincided with higher inflation. Russia is a top three global supplier of energy, base metals, precious metals, bulk metals, fertilizers and soft commodities. Its significance as a commodity producer, combined with pre-existing supply and demand imbalances in the commodity markets, make this conflict particularly inflationary.