Merlin Weekly Macro: US inflation moves stubbornly sideways
The Jupiter Merlin team assess the likelihood of the Federal Reserve cutting interest rates this year given that economic data continues to raise eyebrows.
Volatility remains the order of the day: on October 19th in the aftermath of the Hamas attacks on Israel when markets were at peak jitteriness, the yield on the US 10-Year Treasury (the government-issued bonds) was 5.0%. By December 27th when bond managers closed their books on 2023 having been determined to recoup some of the considerable paper losses incurred since early 2022 and the beginning of the policy tightening cycle, the yield stood at 3.77% (remember, in fixed income prices move in the opposite direction to yields); today, at 4.54% more than half the gains made (or more accurately losses recovered) in late 2023 have been given back in 2024. And to think that amid such significant volatility, regulators including the Bank of England, the consultants and others involved in the management of long-term pension liabilities still have an endearing conception that government bonds are havens of stability, calm and security!
Meanwhile in Europe, where inflation at 2.4% is gradually tending towards the European Central Bank’s (ECB) own 2% target, while couched in conservative language, it is easy to get the sense that the ECB is still itching to reduce its own interest rate even before the Federal Reserve. If weakness in the euro brings some relief to German and Italian exporters and helps drag their economies from the doldrums, so much the better as far as the ECB is concerned.
Against this backdrop, the uncertainties facing Ukraine, and a resilient global economy growing at around 2.5%, the oil price has risen 10% in the past month; gold is breaking new highs; a number of other commodity prices have been rising sharply (the CRB Commodity index which includes oil is 14% up year-on-year and 15% year-to-date; the London Metal Exchange Index, while broadly similar to a year ago in value, has jumped 15% since early February). Commodity prices are naturally volatile and cyclical but the heightened geopolitical tensions are currently perceived as a potential economic and inflationary headwind, unsettling the timing of those anticipated US interest rate reductions (or, in Larry Summers’ mind, adding to the possibility that rates rise rather than fall).
The Jupiter Merlin Portfolios are long-term investments; they are certainly not immune from market volatility, but they are expected to be less volatile over time, commensurate with the risk tolerance of each. With liquidity uppermost in our mind, we seek to invest in funds run by experienced managers with a blend of styles but who share our core philosophy of trying to capture good performance in buoyant markets while minimising as far as possible the risk of losses in more challenging conditions.
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