US inflation fall good news for everyone
This is an immensely and globally significant ‘good news story’.
Inflation in the US has now clearly and unambiguously fallen and fallen very significantly – and without throwing what is still the most important economy in the world into serious recession.
Indeed, if anything, the one ‘grey cloud’ in what is looking like a broadly blue – economic and investment – sky, is precisely a consequence of the US maybe just having pulled off the much-desired ‘soft landing’.
The risk is that a thus surprisingly buoyant US economy - despite the Fed aggressively pushing its official interest rate above the inflation rate – could see rising wages keep inflation there stickily in the (too high) 3-4 per cent range.
Our situation, though, is very different and nowhere near as blue-skyish.
In the US, inflation over the year to June was just 3 per cent.
We will get our number for the June year in two weeks.
It will come in about double that, around 6 per cent.
Furthermore, the NSW and Federal Governments – and the Fair Work Commission – are combining to lock in wage rises of 5-9 per cent across a very significant proportion of the workforce.
The two governments, by conceding a 4 per cent floor, and will eventually award 5 per cent or so. Plus the extra 0.5 per cent being paid on super.
The FWC, by granting a 5.75 to 8 per cent minimum wage increase; again, plus the extra 0.5 per cent on super.
Now, workers clearly need those sorts of wage increases just to minimise the pain of 6-8 per cent inflation; but the cost – in the absence of productivity gains, as RBA governor Lowe has continually warned – is higher inflation.
And higher inflation spells either yet higher interest rates, or high interest rates being sustained for longer, or a bit of both.
I’ve been arguing since late last year that a big fall in US inflation had been “hiding in plain sight”.
On the basis that, while yes, the 12 month inflation numbers were then still too high around 6-7 per cent; that contained a lot of history.
The history, especially the big jump in oil and gas prices after Russia attacked Ukraine in early; plus, the still-lingering impacts of the Covid years on supply chains and critical goods, both industrial and consumer.
It was better I argued to look at a run of recent months in late-2022 and annualise those numbers.
If you did that, you could see – hiding in plain sight – that US inflation had fallen to around 3-4 per cent by late-2022. And that continued through this year.
Indeed, over the last few months, US inflation has run closer to 2.5 per cent on a full-year basis.
And while wages have been growing around 4 per cent and employment has stayed pretty strong. Good news all round.
That’s courtesy of productivity; Jim Chalmers take note.
Yes, stickily higher US services inflation had been a worry, especially for the Fed.
But even that’s now coming down to more like 4 per cent.
The big plus is the end of Fed rate hikes, a strong Wall St. And we see that in our market.