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January CPI Up 0.3%, Signaling Inflation Could Be on Its Way
When the Fed boosted the Monetary Base by more than $3 trillion dollars during Quantitative Easing 1, 2 & 3, and the federal budget moved to a huge deficit predictions of a collapsing dollar proliferated. But inflation never came. Since the end of the 2008-09 financial panic, the Consumer Price Index has increased by an average of just 1.7% per year, falling short of the Fed's (conjectural) 2% target.
Boosting the monetary base is not the same as boosting the amount of money circulating in the economy. Milton Friedman taught us to watch the M2 measure of the money supply. During the first period of QE, from 2008 to 2016, the Fed bought trillions of dollars of bonds, but also increased bank regulation and capital requirements. As a result, banks ended up holding excess reserves and the money supply remained calm, with M2 growing, on average, about 6% per year, similar to the growth rate in the 1990s.
During the 2020 COVID-induced round of Fed money printing, instead of using QE to put reserves in the banking system, the Fed financed government programs to fund loans to businesses and direct payments to individuals. As a result, M2 has grown 26.3% in the past year, the fastest annual growth we can find in US history, and roughly double the pace of M2 growth the US experienced during the 1970s.
Modern Monetary Theory holds that the US can increase real output enough to absorb it. In other words, while inflation is "too much money chasing too few goods" –the output of goods can increase enough to keep inflation low. A tough sell, but nonetheless, the current markets have adopted the concept.
In the past six months, the Consumer Price Index is up 3.6% at an annual rate and if it rises a modest 0.2% per month between January and May (it was 0.3% in January), it will be up 3.4% over 12 months. Part of this is because COVID shutdowns led to weak inflation in early 2020, but inflation is likely to move higher in 2021 as the economy recovers. But, in addition to M2 growth, incomes and savings have increased, while production has not. Demand is exceeding supply. All personal income combined – wages & salaries, employee benefits, small business income, rents, interest, dividends, and transfer payments – was up 6.3% in 2020 versus 2019. Total after-tax income was up 7.2% in 2020, the most for any year since 2000.
Combined, Americans saved about $2.9 trillion in 2020, more than doubling the previous record high of $1.2 trillion in 2018. As of the third quarter of 2020, the amount Americans held in checking accounts, savings accounts, time deposits, and money market funds was up $2.8 trillion from the year prior. Add another $1.9 trillion in federal government stimulus spending (borrowing from the future, to spend today) and the US is awash in cash, much of which is funded by Washington's money printing.
Despite a strong recovery in output, industrial production is 3.3% below pre-COVID levels, while real GDP is 2.5% below. In other words, demand is OK, it's supply that's still hurting – a perfect recipe for inflation. The 10-year Treasury yield has risen from roughly 0.6% in May 2020 to 1.2% today. The gap between the yield on the normal 10-year Treasury Note and the inflation-adjusted 10-year Treasury Note suggests investors expect an annual average increase of 2.2% in the consumer price index (CPI) in the next ten years, and those expectations are rising, and commodity prices continue to surge.
All this money printing threatens to eventually create a sugar high in equities as the markets are floating on a sea of new money. Traditional fixed income (long-term bonds) is at risk and the risk of inflation grows.
When the Fed boosted the Monetary Base by more than $3 trillion dollars during Quantitative Easing 1, 2 & 3, and the federal budget moved to a huge deficit predictions of a collapsing dollar proliferated. But inflation never came. Since the end of the 2008-09 financial panic, the Consumer Price Index has increased by an average of just 1.7% per year, falling short of the Fed's (conjectural) 2% target.
Boosting the monetary base is not the same as boosting the amount of money circulating in the economy. Milton Friedman taught us to watch the M2 measure of the money supply. During the first period of QE, from 2008 to 2016, the Fed bought trillions of dollars of bonds, but also increased bank regulation and capital requirements. As a result, banks ended up holding excess reserves and the money supply remained calm, with M2 growing, on average, about 6% per year, similar to the growth rate in the 1990s.
During the 2020 COVID-induced round of Fed money printing, instead of using QE to put reserves in the banking system, the Fed financed government programs to fund loans to businesses and direct payments to individuals. As a result, M2 has grown 26.3% in the past year, the fastest annual growth we can find in US history, and roughly double the pace of M2 growth the US experienced during the 1970s.
Modern Monetary Theory holds that the US can increase real output enough to absorb it. In other words, while inflation is "too much money chasing too few goods" –the output of goods can increase enough to keep inflation low. A tough sell, but nonetheless, the current markets have adopted the concept.
In the past six months, the Consumer Price Index is up 3.6% at an annual rate and if it rises a modest 0.2% per month between January and May (it was 0.3% in January), it will be up 3.4% over 12 months. Part of this is because COVID shutdowns led to weak inflation in early 2020, but inflation is likely to move higher in 2021 as the economy recovers. But, in addition to M2 growth, incomes and savings have increased, while production has not. Demand is exceeding supply. All personal income combined – wages & salaries, employee benefits, small business income, rents, interest, dividends, and transfer payments – was up 6.3% in 2020 versus 2019. Total after-tax income was up 7.2% in 2020, the most for any year since 2000.
Combined, Americans saved about $2.9 trillion in 2020, more than doubling the previous record high of $1.2 trillion in 2018. As of the third quarter of 2020, the amount Americans held in checking accounts, savings accounts, time deposits, and money market funds was up $2.8 trillion from the year prior. Add another $1.9 trillion in federal government stimulus spending (borrowing from the future, to spend today) and the US is awash in cash, much of which is funded by Washington's money printing.
Despite a strong recovery in output, industrial production is 3.3% below pre-COVID levels, while real GDP is 2.5% below. In other words, demand is OK, it's supply that's still hurting – a perfect recipe for inflation. The 10-year Treasury yield has risen from roughly 0.6% in May 2020 to 1.2% today. The gap between the yield on the normal 10-year Treasury Note and the inflation-adjusted 10-year Treasury Note suggests investors expect an annual average increase of 2.2% in the consumer price index (CPI) in the next ten years, and those expectations are rising, and commodity prices continue to surge.
All this money printing threatens to eventually create a sugar high in equities as the markets are floating on a sea of new money. Traditional fixed income (long-term bonds) is at risk and the risk of inflation grows.
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Barry Young
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