Having raised interest rates sharply between 2022 and the middle of last year to curb inflation, Federal Reserve officials entered this year expecting to reduce borrowing costs. Unfortunately, a resurgence of inflation above expectations early this year upended that plan. However, the most recent monthly data declined from prior readings and returned to signs of slowing again, proving that it will be a bumpy path to reach the Fed’s target level. While two months does not necessarily make a trend, when combined with other data points suddenly showing economic cooling, the prospects for beginning the journey to more normal interest rates appears encouraging.
Inflation came down rapidly in 2023 but has gotten stuck above 3% this year.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) came in above expectations in January through March of this year. Fortunately, that situation reversed itself in April and May, with the latest reading index climbing 3.3% from a year earlier, down from 3.5% in March. The core index, stripping out volatile food and fuel prices to get a better sense of the underlying trend, rose 3.4% last month, down from 3.8% two months earlier. That was the lowest annual increase in core inflation since early 2021, easing concerns that inflation was re-accelerating.
Inflation returning to normal does not mean that prices will revert to historic levels. This is a lesson our younger generation is learning for the first time due to many price increases having been mostly minor for so long. Slower inflation just means that prices are no longer going up as quickly, not that they are coming down after their rapid rise in 2021 and 2022.
The stock market’s recent momentum is a result of the expanding economy and growing corporate earnings. It is conceivable that interest rate cuts may not begin until next year. That timeframe for lower rates could create additional near-term volatility, but should not derail the longer-term trajectory for stocks.