By José Torres
As inflation thrives like a genie released from its bottle, some analysts are questioning if the Federal Reserve’s (the Fed) monetary policy tightening is working. Data released recently shows that the tightening appears to be making its way throughout the economy and dampening demand for consumer goods and services.
September retail sales report showed a weakness with an unchanged reading on a month-over-month basis, much lower than market expectations of a 0.2% rise and lower than August’s 0.4% gain. These figures are not adjusted for inflation, meaning that consumers purchased fewer goods and services when adjusting for volumes since September’s inflation data showed a 0.4% gain.
The preliminary consumer sentiment release for October was 59.8. While slightly better than market expectations of 59 and an improvement from September’s 58.6 level, it is still near record lows. Consumers expressed concerns regarding uncertainty about financial markets, inflation, and the overall economy.
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Expectations for inflation one year from now rose to 5.1% from 4.8% in September while expectations for inflation five years from now rose to 2.9% from 2.8%. On a somewhat encouraging note, easing supply chain pressures contributed to an improvement in purchasing conditions for durable goods.
Higher interest rates and tighter financial conditions continue to point to weak consumption and sentiment overall, especially in the manufacturing and real estate categories.
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Record levels of credit card debt are also punishing consumers as higher interest rates kick in and increase the share of Americans’ budgets that are allocated toward interest expenses rather than necessities. The continued deceleration in the manufacturing PMI, durable goods orders, housing starts and home sales confirms the slowdown in the manufacturing and real estate sectors. As rate hikes and tighter financial conditions work their way through the economy, demand will continue to slow.
September’s CPI data was awful and many wondered if the Fed is tightening for no reason due to a lack of progress on the inflationary front. The challenge is that once the inflationary genie is out of the bottle, it requires a lot of effort and might to reverse the trend. Monetary policy tightening takes time to reach the broad economy and it typically hits leading indicators first, which are weakening and are emblematic of a tightening campaign that is truly working.
Demand and sentiment are weak, which is what the Fed wants and that’s great for taming inflation and rates, but adverse for corporate revenues and earnings.
(Author is Senior Economist at Interactive Brokers)