Contributors Fundamental Analysis Inflation Secular Stagnation

Inflation Secular Stagnation

Friday’s weak US CPI was a powerful reminder that central bankers have been wrong about inflation for a decade, and not just in the US. The pound was the top performer last week while the Canadian dollar lagged. CFTC positioning showed more specs selling the yen. A big week for GBP traders lies ahead. Friday’s GBP Premium trade is already in the green.

On Friday, US September CPI rose 2.2% y/y compared to 2.3% expected, stripping out food and energy left prices up 1.7% compared to the 1.8% consensus. It was one of many inflation misses this year, expecially compounded by real average weekly earnings rising a paltry 0.6% compared to 1.0% expected.

IMF leaders were glowing last week about upbeat potential for global growth and central bankers everywhere believe it’s only a matter of time until prices rise. If they don’t, it will mean a complete re-think of how central banks operate.

The case against inflation is what many emerging markets are experiencing now. inflation is low virtually everywhere. Few emerging markets are generating runaway inflation.

China’s economy continues to grow at a nearly 7% pace annually, but inflation is just 1.8% and has been below 3% for four years. Rare pockets of inflation like Russia have been due to currency shocks and have flattened shortly afterwards.

Looking ahead, the Party Congress in China is the main event in the week ahead, starting Wednesday. In an early hint of what people will be talking about, PBOC Gov Zhou warned that Chinese companies have taken on too much debt.

CFTC Commitments of Traders

Speculative net futures trader positions as of the close on Tuesday. Net short denoted by – long by +.

  • EUR +91K vs +91K prior
  • GBP +15K vs +20K prior
  • JPY -101K vs -85K prior
  • CHF –4.3K vs -3.2K prior
  • CAD +76K vs +75K prior
  • AUD +69K vs 72K prior
  • NZD +6K vs +8K prior

The pound longs who hung in there after the beating over the past few weeks were rewarded with a big bounce last week. Overall the moves aren’t large but if US 10-year yields can break above 2.40%, then expect an extreme short. A big week for GBP traders lies ahead. Further analysis on UK data and events follows after this IMT.

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Ashraf Laidi is an independent strategist and trader, founder of Intermarket Strategy Ltd and author of "Currency Trading & Intermarket Analysis". He is the former chief global strategist at City Index / FX Solutions, where he focused on foreign exchange and global macro developments pertaining to central bank policies, sovereign debt and intermarket dynamics. Ashraf had also served as Chief Strategist at CMC Markets, where he headed a global team of analysts and led seminars and trainings in four continents. His insights on currencies and commodities won him several #1 rankings with FXWeek and Reuters. Prior to CMC Markets, Laidi monitored the performance of a multi-FX portfolio at the United Nations, assessed sovereign and project investment risk with Hagler Bailly and the World Bank, and analyzed emerging market bonds at Reuters. Laidi also created the first 24-hour currency web site for traders and researchers alike on the eve of the creation of the euro. Laidi's analysis of currency markets stand out based on his distinct style in bridging the fundamental and technical aspects of the markets. Laidi regularly appears on CNBC TV (US, Europe, Arabia and Asia/Pacific), Bloomberg TV (US, Asia/Pacific, France and Spain), BNN, PBSs Nightly Business Report, and BBC. His insights also appear in the Financial Times, the Wall Street Journal and Barrons. He has given numerous interviews and lectures in Arabic, French, and to audiences spanning from Canada, Central America and Asia/Pacific.

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