Artículos Relacionados con Inflation

El Centro de Noticias de HTX ofrece los artículos más recientes y un análisis profundo sobre "Inflation", cubriendo tendencias del mercado, actualizaciones de proyectos, desarrollos tecnológicos y políticas regulatorias en la industria de cripto.

Interest Rate Hike Option Back on the Table, CPI Release Imminent: What Variables Are Markets Focusing On?

The possibility of interest rate hikes is back on the table ahead of the June CPI release. Fed Governor Christopher Waller stated that if upcoming core inflation data remains hot, the FOMC should consider tightening monetary policy soon. His comments, directly linking potential action to the CPI report, caused market expectations for a July rate hike to rise from around 35% to over 40%. This CPI report is critical not for dictating a single meeting's outcome, but for testing the credibility of disinflation. A higher-than-expected core CPI reading would challenge the Fed's ability to remain patient, potentially shifting internal discussions toward more tightening. Conversely, cooler data would allow markets to view Waller's remarks as a warning rather than a policy shift signal. The repricing of rate expectations pressures risk assets like tech stocks and cryptocurrencies (BTC, ETH) by pushing up the discount rate for future cash flows and strengthening the US dollar. The key variable to watch post-CPI is whether the implied probability of a July hike stabilizes above 50%, which would signify a shift from pricing a tail risk to a baseline scenario. The most significant market stress would come from a combination of hot CPI data, a sustained rise in hike probabilities above 50%, and similar hawkish signals from other Fed officials, forcing a broad repricing of the "hiking cycle is over" trade.

marsbitHace 3 hora(s)

Interest Rate Hike Option Back on the Table, CPI Release Imminent: What Variables Are Markets Focusing On?

marsbitHace 3 hora(s)

Chip Stocks Lead Gains, Driving Nasdaq Rebound; Dow Hits 53,000 for First Time; Oil and Gold Under Pressure; Bitcoin Surges Following Trump's Statement

On Monday, U.S. stocks rallied with the tech-heavy Nasdaq leading gains, breaking a recent losing streak. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above the 53,000 mark for the first time. The rebound was fueled by positive news from AI infrastructure leaders: Nvidia confirmed its server roadmap remains unchanged, and Broadcom announced an extended chip partnership with Apple until 2031. However, Morgan Stanley strategist Mike Wilson warned that the semiconductor sector's trajectory resembles that of silver before a sharp correction, hinting at potential bubble risks. In commodities, oil prices remained under pressure. WTI crude traded flat around $68-$69, while Brent fell to its lowest since late February at $71.75. This weakness followed Saudi Arabia's significant price cut for August cargoes—its largest in at least 26 years—raising concerns about oversupply as OPEC+ agreed to boost production targets starting in August. Gold edged down 0.4% to $4,162 per ounce, pressured by a stronger dollar and hawkish-leaning signals from Federal Reserve officials. Bitcoin reversed early losses to surge about 1.4% to $63,571 after former President Donald Trump publicly declared himself a "big believer in cryptocurrency." This statement countered selling pressure from a major firm's $216 million Bitcoin divestment. In bond markets, the 10-year Treasury yield dipped slightly to 4.47%. The dollar index was largely flat, while USD/JPY rose 0.4% to 162.03, nearing a 40-year high and testing Japan's intervention resolve. European equities dipped slightly, with the STOXX 600 closing down 0.35%, retreating from record highs hit after the strong U.S. jobs data.

华尔街日报Hace 7 hora(s)

Chip Stocks Lead Gains, Driving Nasdaq Rebound; Dow Hits 53,000 for First Time; Oil and Gold Under Pressure; Bitcoin Surges Following Trump's Statement

华尔街日报Hace 7 hora(s)

On the Eve of the US Stock Inflation Test, Wall Street Faces the Most Severe 'Data Deception' in History

On the eve of the crucial US June CPI release, a significant credibility gap is emerging between official inflation data and consumer sentiment. While May CPI and PCE figures suggested a "concerning but not critical" picture, the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index plummeted to its lowest level in nearly 50 years. This contradiction is prompting economists to question the reliability of key macroeconomic indicators. The core issue, as highlighted by labor economist Kathryn Anne Edwards, lies in a systemic flaw within the current inflation measurement framework. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) averages prices across a "market basket" meant for a "typical consumer," thereby masking vastly different inflation experiences across demographic groups. For instance, Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) research indicates that from 2006 to 2023, the lowest income quintile faced a cumulative inflation rate 7.7 percentage points higher than the highest quintile—a disparity largely invisible in the headline CPI number. This averaging effect means investors and policymakers relying on aggregate CPI may be basing decisions on a statistically smoothed figure that fails to capture the true distribution of economic pressure. Edwards argues that expanding this measurement framework is technically feasible, requiring primarily political will rather than new data collection. The BLS already tracks 100,000 items monthly; creating more granular indices for different family types, income levels, and housing statuses would mainly involve re-weighting existing data. The BLS has produced such experimental series before. A more nuanced data picture is crucial for accurate policy and market forecasting. Ultimately, improving measurement cannot solve underlying economic stresses. Edwards notes concurrent pressures like slowing hiring, stagnant wage growth, persistently high prices, rising credit card debt, a subdued housing market due to high rates, and AI's potential disruption to jobs. These factors collectively explain the deep chasm between official statistics and consumer pessimism. The key takeaway for markets is the need to look beyond a single headline CPI number. Understanding the divergence in inflation experiences across the population is critical for accurately assessing the real pressure within the economy, the path of Federal Reserve policy, and risks on the consumer side.

marsbitHace 15 hora(s)

On the Eve of the US Stock Inflation Test, Wall Street Faces the Most Severe 'Data Deception' in History

marsbitHace 15 hora(s)

On the Eve of the U.S. Stock Inflation Test, Wall Street Faces the Worst 'Data Deception' in History

On the eve of the US June CPI data release, a stark contradiction is undermining market trust in macroeconomic indicators. Official data, showing May CPI at 4.2% and PCE at 3.4%, paints a picture of manageable inflation pressures. However, the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index hit a record low in May and its second-lowest reading in June across its 50-year history, which includes multiple recessions and crises. This gap highlights a systemic flaw in the current inflation measurement system, as argued by labor economist Kathryn Anne Edwards. The CPI, based on an average "market basket" for a "typical consumer," masks vastly different inflation realities across income and demographic groups. BLS research from 2006-2023 shows the lowest income quintile experienced an annual inflation rate approximately 0.28 percentage points higher than the highest quintile, a cumulative 7.7-point difference. This averaging obscures the true economic pressure distribution from investors and policymakers. Edwards argues the technical barriers to improvement are low. The BLS already collects the necessary price data. Expanding the current three consumer baskets—by factors like household type, income, age, or tenure—would mainly involve re-weighting existing data, a path already demonstrated by BLS's experimental series for seniors and income quintiles. Beyond measurement issues, real economic pressures persist, including slowing hiring, stagnant wage growth, elevated prices, rising credit card debt, high interest rates, and AI's potential labor market impact. These factors explain the deep consumer pessimism. For markets, the key takeaway is to question how well a single aggregate CPI captures the true, differentiated inflation pressures and consumption risks that are critical for understanding the Fed's policy path.

链捕手Hace 15 hora(s)

On the Eve of the U.S. Stock Inflation Test, Wall Street Faces the Worst 'Data Deception' in History

链捕手Hace 15 hora(s)

活动图片