Ever since the
financial crisis, central banks have pursued expansionary monetary policies to
encourage reflation and avoid deflation. Well, it’s taken some time, but
inflation is finally here.
Last week, major
stock indices in the United States moved lower after inflation, as measured by
the Consumer Price Index (CPI), was four times higher than anticipated,
reported Ben Levisohn of Barron’s.
Higher inflation is
the result of a supply and demand imbalance. As the pandemic has calmed in the
United States, consumers have emerged eager to spend money – so eager that
consumer spending is about 5.5 standard deviations above average. That’s a lot.
The problem is
finding stuff to buy. The Economist explained, “…red-hot demand is
increasingly met slowly or not at all…Nowhere are shortages more acute than in
America, where a boom is under way. Consumer spending is growing by over 10
percent at an annual rate, as people put to work the $2trn-plus of extra
savings accumulated in the past year.”
Shortages are the
result of two kinks in the supply hose.
The first is the
supply chain. There is a shortage “of everything from timber to
semiconductors,” which are essential to building other products. In addition,
shipping containers have become a scarce resource, causing the cost of shipping
goods from China to the United States to triple, reported The Economist.
The second is labor.
This week’s higher-than-expected inflation data mirrored last week’s
lower-than-expected employment data. No one is certain why the employment
numbers were lackluster, although theories abound. Regardless, there are limits
on what companies can produce when they have too few employees.
The question is
whether supply chains can be straightened so demand for goods and services can
be met. If so, higher inflation may prove transitory as the Federal Reserve and
some economists anticipate. If not, inflation may stick around. Time will tell.
Womack Investment Advisers, Inc.
WOMACK INVESTMENT ADVISERS, INC.
Oklahoma / Main Office: 1366 E. 15th Street - Edmond, OK 73013
California Office: 4660 La Jolla Village Dr., Ste. 100 - San Diego, CA 92122
Phone (405) 340-1717 - Toll Free (877) 340-1717
Website: www.womackadvisers.com
Womack Investment Advisers, Inc. (WIA) is a registered investment adviser whose principal office is located in Oklahoma. Womack Investment Advisers, Inc. is also registered in the State of California, the State of Illinois, the State of Indiana, and the State of Texas. WIA only transacts business in sates where it is properly registered, or excluded, or exempted from registration requirements.
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