Inflation, the Fed, and the Markets

During the ten years prior to COVID, PCE inflation, the Fed’s preferred measure, averaged about 1.5% per year. Jerome Powell said it was too low and he wanted inflation to “average” 2% over time. Well, he got his wish, and more. PCE inflation has averaged 3.7% in the past five years and 2.6% over the past ten years.

In other words, because of its misguided policies during COVID, the Fed has pushed inflation above both its short-term and long-term target. Any apparent success at bringing it back down appears to be “transitory.”

In the past 12 months, PCE prices are up 2.5%, barely better than the 2.6% gain in the year ending in February 2024 in spite of the Fed thinking that monetary policy is currently restrictive or tight. Core PCE prices are up 2.8% in the past year versus 2.9% in the year ending February 2024.

Some investors might still think this is due to the lags associated with housing rents, but the Fed developed a measure a few years ago called the SuperCore, which excludes food, energy, other goods, and housing rents, and that measure of prices is up 3.3% in the past year. No wonder the Fed doesn’t mention it anymore.

It's not tariffs that concern us. They may boost some prices, but they also reduce demand of other goods and services. So, why are we pessimistic about the Fed keeping inflation persistently at 2.0% or below? Because ultimately inflation is a monetary phenomenon and the consensus among economists in favor of low inflation has broken down.