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Inflation Soars, Powell Remains Unmoved. What About Gold?

Published 07/15/2021, 05:48 AM
Updated 05/14/2017, 06:45 AM

The CPI surged 5.4% in June, but Fed Chair Jerome Powell still sees inflation as transitory. For now, gold has risen under the dovish Fed’s wing amid higher inflation.

Did you think that 5% was high inflation? Or that inflation has already peaked? Wrong! Inflation rose even further in June, although it was already elevated in May. Indeed, the consumer price index surged 0.9% in the last month, following a 0.6% jump in May. It was the largest one-month change since June 2008, during the Great Recession.

Importantly, the Core Price Index, which excludes food and energy, also rose 0.9% (after a 0.7% increase in the previous month). It shows that inflation is accelerating not only because of higher energy prices but also due to more structural, underlying trends.

On an annual basis, the inflationary outlook is even scarier. The CPI soared 5.4% in June, following a 5% jump in May. It was the largest annual change since August 2008, just before the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers and the outbreak of the global financial crisis. As the chart below shows, the annual inflation rate has been trending up every month since the beginning of 2021. So, how much “temporality” can be found here?

CPI And Core CPI For US

However, the real shocker is that the core CPI surged 4.5%, the largest 12-month increase since November 1991 (see the chart above)! Oops, Houston, we have a problem, an inflationary problem! Or at least a surprise, as June inflation numbers came significantly above expectations.

Furthermore, high inflation could persist later this year, or it could even accelerate further – this is at least what the producer prices suggest. The PPI for final demand increased 1.0% last month after rising 0.8% in May. On an annual basis, it surged 7.3%, following a 6.6% rise in May. It was the largest gain since November 2010. Additionally, rising producer prices could translate (with some lag) into rising consumer prices.

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Of course, inflationary pressure may soften later this year. After all, the index for used cars and trucks soared 10.5% in June (MoM) and 45.2% (YoY), as the chart below shows, accounting for more than one-third of the surge. However, inflation is already more persistent than expected, and it could remain elevated for longer than believed.

CPI Subindex Of Used Cars And Shelter

In other words, although the surge in inflation is partially caused by the supply bottlenecks and the recovery from the pandemic, it also has structural origins that are not entirely linked to the epidemic.

You can think about the increase in the broad money supply and easy fiscal policy with stimulus much larger than the output gap. As one can see in the chart above, the index for shelter—the biggest component of the CPI, not hit directly by the pandemic—has also been increasing recently.

Implications For Gold

What does the acceleration in inflation mean for the gold market? On the one hand, higher inflation should increase the demand for gold as an inflation hedge. It could also decrease the real interest rates and weaken the US dollar, also supporting the yellow metal. But on the other hand, higher inflation could translate into expectations of more hawkish Fed and higher interest rates, which could negatively affect gold.

Luckily for gold bulls, it seems that the acceleration in inflation won’t change the Fed’s course. Powell downplayed the inflation threat in his testimony yesterday to Congress. He continued seeing higher inflation as transitory and said that conditions to trigger a policy shift are “still a ways off.”

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As a consequence, the price of gold increased yesterday to above $1,820, temporarily reaching $1,830. It’s not surprising, as an unmoved Fed amid higher inflation is a fundamentally positive factor for the yellow metal.

However, the upward move was very modest given the circumstances, which isn’t particularly encouraging. Investors seem to still believe that inflation is just transitory, and it won’t be a problem for the economy. But the Fed’s tightening cycle will come sooner or later (think about Bank of Canada or Reserve Bank of New Zealand which have already tightened their monetary policies), possibly with some hawkish twists later this year, so gold bulls should remain cautious.

Disclaimer: Please note that the aim of the above analysis is to discuss the likely long-term impact of the featured phenomenon on the price of gold and this analysis does not indicate (nor does it aim to do so) whether gold is likely to move higher or lower in the short- or medium term. In order to determine the latter, many additional factors need to be considered (i.e., sentiment, chart patterns, cycles, indicators, ratios, self-similar patterns and more) and we are taking them into account (and discussing the short- and medium-term outlook) in our Gold & Silver Trading Alerts.

Latest comments

Just as an example since 1979 Brazil had to implement 13 big economic plans to fight inflation that failed. It was only in 1994 with lots os lessons learned that inflation came under control. What has been learned in this period is that inflation is a very contagious process (inertial inflation theory for example) and that it is not easily erradicated with high interest rates. Inflation also can stay high with high unemployment rates. Lets see if this transitory phase will be so different in the USA.
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