Stocks and Inflation Expectations are Once Again Synching Up

by Capital Spectator

The tumble in stock prices lately has been accompanied by a so-far mild retreat in inflation expectations (the spread on the nominal 10-year Treasury yield less its inflation-indexed counterpart). This relationship deserves close attentionā€¦ again. A weak stock market is one thing. But if the marketā€™s outlook for inflation slides further, thatā€™s another matter entirely and one that comes with bearish implications for the economy if it unfolds with dramatically lower stock prices.

Recall that until roughly a year ago inflation expectations and stocks had been tightly connected. Equities tended to rise (fall) as inflation expectations increased (decreased), a relationship that I call the new abnormal. Abnormal because higher inflation in the grand historical scheme of macro and markets isnā€™t usually a bullish scenario for stocks. But after the financial crisis in 2008, the relationship changed, thanks to the higher risk of disinflation/deflation. Accordingly, expectations of higher (lower) inflation was considered bullish (bearish).

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But the new abnormal seemed to give way in early 2013 as the economy developed a deeper level of forward momentum. Last April, I asked the question: ā€œHas the stock market finally broken free of inflation expectations?ā€ A year on, we now know that the answer has been ā€œyesā€ for much of the past 12 months, and the decoupling has been a healthy change.

A stock market that rises and falls because of changing expectations with corporate earnings and economic fundamentals vs. the outlook for inflation is a return to something approximating a normal state of affairs. But with a dose of wobbly economic news in the US and elsewhere in the world in recent weeks, itā€™s reasonable to wonder if the new abnormal is mounting a comeback.

Itā€™s premature to say anything definitive at this point. Indeed, inflation expectations are still in the low-2% range thatā€™s prevailed since last July. Meantime, stocks will continue to fluctuate and itā€™s best not to read too much into short-term price volatility. Nonetheless, inflation expectations are again on my short list of indicators to monitor.

The bottom line: If the marketā€™s estimate for inflation via 10-year Treasuries falls below 2% at some point that would be a worrisome signā€”particularly if itā€™s tied with sharply lower stock prices. For the moment, the risk of a) lower prices and 2) lower inflation projections still looks like a low-probability event, in large part because the broad trend for a diversified set of economic and financial indicators still looks encouraging (see last monthā€™s US Economic Profile).

But more recent economic news suggests a bit of turbulence is brewing in the economic trend. It may be noiseā€¦ or not, and so itā€™s important to keep a close eye on the incoming data and adjust the analysis accordingly. That includes watching Mr. Marketā€™s shifting estimates for inflation.

Copyright Ā© Capital Spectator

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