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Inflation scorcher means Fed may be more aggressive. Market pros see higher risk of recession

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A much hotter-than-expected consumer inflation report could mean an even more aggressive Federal Reserve — and even higher odds of a recession, according to market pros. “There’s no spinning this, other than the Fed has to get more aggressive near-term and crush demand. That cements a recession now, ” said Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist at Charles Schwab. ” I think a recession is an inevitability. ” June’s consumer price index was a scorching 9.1%, well above 8.8% year-over-year headline number expected by economists surveyed by Dow Jones. That was the highest pace since December 1981. On a monthly basis, headline CPI jumped 1.3%. The core reading, which excludes food and energy, gained 0.7%. That compares to forecasts of 1.1% and 0.5%, respectively. Core CPI rose 5.9% year-over-year, and was still below March’s 6.5% pace. “CPI keeps the Fed firmly on course,” said Greg Faranello, head of U.S. rates at AmeriVet Securities. “[This] lends itself to more pressure on short-end yields, continued yield curve inversion and may fuel speculation of 100 [basis points] this month.” A rate hike of 100 basis points would equal a 1% rate hike. Market action following the report Stock futures staged a sharp reversal and fell hard after the 8:30 a.m. ET report. The three major indexes slumped after the trading session began. Bond yields rose, and the 10-year Treasury yield crossed back above 3%. The 2-year edged as high as about 3.2%, widening the gap between the 10-year and 2-year, or steepening the so-called yield inversion. An inverted yield curve, in which shorter duration yields rise above longer duration, like the 10-year, is a recession warning. “The core is chugging along at a frightening clip,” said Wells Fargo’s Michael Schumacher. He said fed funds futures immediately moved to price 81 basis points rate hike for July. That would indicate that some in the market expect a rate hike of more than 75 basis points. “With core running this strong, the Fed can’t ignore that. This is a bad number,” he said. The market had been pricing the chance for a 75 basis point hike, or 0.75%, for later this month, on top of a similar hike last month. A basis point equals 0.01%. For July, “50 seems unlikely. 75 is just about baked in and the market is saying 100 could happen,” said Schumacher, adding he believes a 1% rate hike is unlikely. “The market’s now pricing 63 for September… that’s up 12 today. It had been pretty well locked in at 50 and now it’s a jump ball between 50 and 75 for September.” Sonders said the economy may already have entered a recession, and for stocks that could mean more turmoil. “Markets tend to lead. The average decline for markets with recession is 32%,” she said. Within the headline number, energy prices surged 7.5% over the month and were 41.6% higher from a year ago. The war in Ukraine has driven oil and gasoline prices higher, and it is expected to continue to impact prices. “Not that the war is a primary driver, but that has an ongoing impact on energy prices, commodities prices, food prices,” said Sonders. She noted that even if the demand does decline, the wild card will remain energy prices.

Shoppers are seen wearing masks while shopping at a Walmart store, in North Brunswick, New Jersey, July 20, 2020.
Eduardo Munoz | Reuters

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