Lethe200
Senior Member
- Location
- San Francisco Bay Area
This is an excerpt from an article I ran across today:
What Inflation Could Mean for the Market
Barron's [cover article] by Avi Salzman, Dec 30, 2017
full article: https://www.barrons.com/articles/what-inflation-could-mean-for-the-market-1514604543 (NOTE: I accessed this thru my WSJournal subscription, so it may or may not be available for non-subscribers!)
Remember inflation?
Largely absent during the economy’s eight-year recovery from the financial crisis, inflation is on track to pick up in 2018—and it might just catch investors off-guard.
For now, price pressures are benign, even as U.S. economic growth cruises into the new year at a 3% clip, with business-friendly tax cuts on the way. The core consumer price index, which strips out energy and food, was up just 1.7% year over year in November.
Economists have raised the specter of inflation for several years, only to be disproved time and again. There’s reason to believe, however, that 2018 will be different—that prices will finally rise in a more sustained pattern, forcing stock- and bond-market investors to react to a new trend. “An unanticipated acceleration in inflation is probably the biggest risk for markets in 2018,” says Larry Hatheway, chief economist at GAM Investments and head of GAM Investment Solutions.
Economists like Hatheway aren’t expecting runaway inflation, as in the days of disco and leisure suits, when prices rose by double digits. They’re girding for an annual increase of 2% to 2.5% at the most.
Yet the return of inflation would change market psychology. “You don’t really need inflation of a great magnitude here to get an inflation surprise,” says Don Rissmiller, chief economist at Strategas Research Partners. “Just a little bit more inflation from where we are today is probably enough to generate an inflation scare in 2018.”
Such a jolt could reshuffle the market. Since 1950, stocks have traded at an average multiple of 18.1 times earnings when inflation has ranged between zero and 2%—the “sweet spot,” says SunTrust Chief Market Strategist Keith Lerner. At 2% to 4%, the multiple slips to 17.2.
Inflation is “the ultimate enemy of financial assets,” says Lloyd Khaner, president of Khaner Capital Management. “Name your financial asset—inflation tends not to help, if not kill it.”
Stocks that are sensitive to rising interest rates—from utilities to telecom companies—would be particularly vulnerable, while financial, energy, and materials stocks could ride a wave of accelerating growth in prices.
IN THE PAST TWO WEEKS, investors got an early taste of what could happen during an inflationary period, as weakness in the dollar helped send copper up 8%, even as stocks gained just 1.3%.
Bonds face a more dangerous reckoning. It won’t take much to turn investment-grade bonds into ugly investments, says David Lafferty, chief market strategist for Natixis Investment Managers. “Unless you think the economy is going to tank and rates are going to fall, the returns to high-quality bonds are somewhere between unimpressive and somewhat negative,” he says. Inflation could increase the pain “even if core CPI goes from 1.7% to 1.9%,” he adds.
Making the outlook so unpredictable is the peculiar economic cycle that followed the global financial crisis. Ultralow interest rates around the world inflated the value of some assets, but not wages or the prices of goods and services, leaving central bankers befuddled.
What Inflation Could Mean for the Market
Barron's [cover article] by Avi Salzman, Dec 30, 2017
full article: https://www.barrons.com/articles/what-inflation-could-mean-for-the-market-1514604543 (NOTE: I accessed this thru my WSJournal subscription, so it may or may not be available for non-subscribers!)
Remember inflation?
Largely absent during the economy’s eight-year recovery from the financial crisis, inflation is on track to pick up in 2018—and it might just catch investors off-guard.
For now, price pressures are benign, even as U.S. economic growth cruises into the new year at a 3% clip, with business-friendly tax cuts on the way. The core consumer price index, which strips out energy and food, was up just 1.7% year over year in November.
Economists have raised the specter of inflation for several years, only to be disproved time and again. There’s reason to believe, however, that 2018 will be different—that prices will finally rise in a more sustained pattern, forcing stock- and bond-market investors to react to a new trend. “An unanticipated acceleration in inflation is probably the biggest risk for markets in 2018,” says Larry Hatheway, chief economist at GAM Investments and head of GAM Investment Solutions.
Economists like Hatheway aren’t expecting runaway inflation, as in the days of disco and leisure suits, when prices rose by double digits. They’re girding for an annual increase of 2% to 2.5% at the most.
Yet the return of inflation would change market psychology. “You don’t really need inflation of a great magnitude here to get an inflation surprise,” says Don Rissmiller, chief economist at Strategas Research Partners. “Just a little bit more inflation from where we are today is probably enough to generate an inflation scare in 2018.”
Such a jolt could reshuffle the market. Since 1950, stocks have traded at an average multiple of 18.1 times earnings when inflation has ranged between zero and 2%—the “sweet spot,” says SunTrust Chief Market Strategist Keith Lerner. At 2% to 4%, the multiple slips to 17.2.
Inflation is “the ultimate enemy of financial assets,” says Lloyd Khaner, president of Khaner Capital Management. “Name your financial asset—inflation tends not to help, if not kill it.”
Stocks that are sensitive to rising interest rates—from utilities to telecom companies—would be particularly vulnerable, while financial, energy, and materials stocks could ride a wave of accelerating growth in prices.
IN THE PAST TWO WEEKS, investors got an early taste of what could happen during an inflationary period, as weakness in the dollar helped send copper up 8%, even as stocks gained just 1.3%.
Bonds face a more dangerous reckoning. It won’t take much to turn investment-grade bonds into ugly investments, says David Lafferty, chief market strategist for Natixis Investment Managers. “Unless you think the economy is going to tank and rates are going to fall, the returns to high-quality bonds are somewhere between unimpressive and somewhat negative,” he says. Inflation could increase the pain “even if core CPI goes from 1.7% to 1.9%,” he adds.
Making the outlook so unpredictable is the peculiar economic cycle that followed the global financial crisis. Ultralow interest rates around the world inflated the value of some assets, but not wages or the prices of goods and services, leaving central bankers befuddled.