The Federal Reserve Is Paying Attention To Stabilizing Core Inflation

A month ago I asked who is paying attention to stabilizing core inflation. The question was timely given a host of financial indicators that showed mixed concern for the implications of inflation taking too much time to settle into the Federal Reserve’s target of 2%. Since then, long-term bond yields have continued higher as the bond market is clearly paying attention. In turn, various members of the Federal Reserve are also taking note. Recent “Fedspeak” suggests that stabilizing core inflation is giving Fed members pause about the downward path of the Fed funds rate. Here are a set of timely quotes from today:

“A strategy of repeatedly lowering the fed funds target range toward a more neutral level relies on confidence that the neutral level is materially lower than where rates are now. When I look at the available evidence, though, I see substantial signs that the neutral rate has increased in recent years and some hints that it could be very close to where the fed funds rate is now…ces. I anticipate the FOMC will most likely need more rate cuts to finish the journey. But it’s difficult to be sure how many cuts may be needed and how soon they may need to happen.” – Navigating in shallow waters: Monetary policy strategy in a better-balanced economy, Dallas Fed President Lorie K. Logan, November 13, 2024

“Shifting from my baseline to alternative scenarios, recent information suggests to me that the risk of inflation ceasing to converge toward 2%, or moving higher, has risen, while the risk of an unwelcome deterioration in the labor market has remained unchanged or possibly fallen.” – Musalem: Remarks on Monetary Policy and the U.S. Economic Outlook, St. Louis Fed President Alberto Musalem, November 13, 2024

“While now is the time to begin dialing back the restrictiveness of monetary policy, it remains to be seen how much further interest rates will decline or where they might eventually settle.” – Longer-term Considerations for Growth and Monetary Policy, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City President and Chief Executive Officer Jeff Schmid, November 13, 2024

All three speeches included Fedspeak for caution on the pace of rate cuts while maintaining the flexibility to follow the data. These speeches also came on the same day as the release of the October CPI data. This timely convergence of caution and circumspection is important because core CPI maintained the stabilization trend in place since a low in July (see the green line below). Meanwhile, core PCE, the Fed’s favorite indicator of inflation also looks like it is stabilizing. In other words, it seems the Fed is paying attention to stabilizing inflation patterns.

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Sources: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: All Items Less Food and Energy in U.S. City Average [CPILFESL], retrieved from FRED, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, November 13, 2024. U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, Personal Consumption Expenditures Excluding Food and Energy (Chain-Type Price Index) [PCEPILFE], retrieved from FRED, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, November 13, 2024.

Shelter costs continue to drive the bulk of inflation. For October, shelter costs constituted 65% of the year-over-year increase in the CPI. Housing costs are in a paradoxical juncture where monetary policy could help maintain elevated housing costs no matter where interest rates go. The National Assocation of Homebuilders (NAHB) laments that high interest rates contribute to contraints on supply thourgh an expensive and difficult financing environment for construction loans. On the other hand, looser monetary policy could reignite a housing demand that strains supply further and drives up prices. For now, a surprise rebound in mortgage rates is tamping down housing demand.
 

A Friendly Message from Gold?

While inflation is stabilizing, gold may have topped out.

Two months ago I interpreted the strength in gold as indicative of a skepticism about the Fed’s implied victory message on inflation. That trend persisted until last week. The resolution of the U.S. presidential election generated a fresh surge in Bitcoin (BTC/USD) and presumably drained interest in gold. The SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) gapped down and lost 3.0%. I was hopeful that the 50-day moving average (DMA) (the red line below) would hold as support. As a (perma) bull on gold, I added call options to supplement my core GLD position. Today’s 1.0% loss in GLD further confirmed a 50DMA breakdown. This bearish technical signal means that I am unlikely to try new short-term trades for a while.

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Source for charts: TradingView.com

The new inverse correlation between gold and Bitcoin indicates a sharp shift in preferences with Bitcoin getting an added advantage from expectations of a pro-crypto regulatory regime starting next year.
 

The Bond Market Remains Wary

Two months ago I claimed that the bond market acted wary about the Fed’s presumed victory over inflation. Sure enough, long-term yields have steadily risen ever since. The iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT), which goes up when long-term interest rates go down, is now trading near the bottom of a presumed horizontal trading range. My strategy to fade TLT has worked all the way down.

After TLT gapped up for some reason on the CPI news, I thought I missed my latest profit opportunity. So when TLT faded back to the previous day’s close, I counted myself fortunate and took profits on my latest round of TLT put options. TLT then went on to lose 1.0% for the day.

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The U.S. dollar soars

The U.S. dollar index (DXY) has benefited from one tailwind after another. Now, the presumed tailwind comes from the boost it should get with increased tariffs that also promise to prop up inflationary pressures in the economy. Fewer dollars going overseas to buy goods tips the supply/demand balance in favor of a stronger dollar. Two months ago I decided to bet on continues strength in the British pound versus the U.S. dollar by buying shares of Invesco CurrencyShares® British Pound Sterling Trust (FXB). I took the opportunity to buy when FXB tested its uptrending 50DMA. The currency ETF has continued downward from there with little sign of an imminent rebound.

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Conclusion

With the Presidential election behind us, the bets on stabilizing (or even stronger) inflation are clarified for now: long Bitcoin, long gold only after Bitcoin enthusiasm wanes somehow, long U.S. dollar, and short TLT. While I sold all my Bitcoin earlier in the day, I will continue to trade by buying dips. I am conflicted on the U.S. dollar as I stubbornly hold some dollar shorts while trading in and out of dollar longs. At some point, I will commit to a dollar long by shorting EUR/USD. Europe stands to lose in the next administration with a weaker NATO, more contentious relationships, and higher tariffs in a weakening economic backdrop.

The Federal Reserve has ahead as precarious a path as ever while it gets increasingly wary about stabilizing inflation!


More By This Author:

Who Is Paying Attention To Stabilizing Core Inflation?
What A Victory Over Inflation Looks Like To The Federal Reserve
An Exit From The 20% Rule For Buying EWZ (Brazil ETF)

Disclosure: long GLD shares and calls, long PHYS, long FXB

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