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Most will probably agree that US President Donald Trump’s back-and-forth on tariffs is challenging to keep track of, and the uncertainty is impacting risk assets. Last Tuesday, the US administration imposed levies on three of America’s largest trading partners: Canada, Mexico, and China, only to see some goods exempted the following day (for one month), with additional items added to the exempted list on Thursday of the same week. During an interview with Fox News on Sunday, uncertainty mounted when Trump sidestepped whether he was expecting a recession this year, stating ‘he hates to predict things like that’ and adding that there would be a ‘period of transition’.
As a result of tariffs enforced in February, this week’s CPI inflation release could be a turning point. Although tariffs did not take effect in February (except for China), given the 30-day reprieve, businesses have been preparing to bear tariffs by raising prices. Both the ISM (Institute for Supply Management) manufacturing and services PMIs (Purchasing Managers’ Indexes) showed that the prices paid sub-indexes pushed higher. While the ISM manufacturing index dropped to 50.3 from January’s reading of 50.9 – along with the employment and new orders indexes dipping into contractionary territory to 47.6 and 48.6, respectively – the prices paid index surged to the upside, coming in at 62.4 from 54.9 in January.
If this week’s report indicates rising price pressures, I believe this presents a noteworthy upside risk to inflation, potentially influencing rate pricing, which may result in a bid in US Treasury yields and the US dollar (USD).
Fed Unlikely to Move Based on February’s CPI Print
Should data report as expected, although this would mark signs of cooling inflation, it provides the US Federal Reserve (Fed) with little incentive to begin easing policy at this juncture given the current uncertainty ahead.
According to market pricing, this month’s meeting (19 March) will unlikely see any rate adjustment; investors currently have their eye on June’s meeting for the next 25 basis point (bp) cut (-34 bps). As a note, Fed speak will be limited until the next meeting as the central bank limits the extent to which Fed officials speak publicly – known as the ‘blackout period’.
Nevertheless, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell made the headlines on Friday. Speaking at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business Monetary Policy Forum in New York, Powell reiterated that the Fed is not in a rush to cut rates, commenting: ‘Our current policy stance is well positioned to deal with the risks and uncertainties that we face in pursuing both sides of our dual mandate’.
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