Wholesale Price Growth Slows In Welcome News For Battered Bonds

Good news for the melancholic, inflation fatalists among you (I should say "among us" considering I include myself in that group): Producer price growth in the US was tame in December. That's according to Tuesday's update on wholesale prices, which rose 0.2% last month, against estimates for a 0.3% pace. The ex-food, energy and trade gauge rose 0.1%, just a third of the expected gain. The undershoot will be welcome at the Fed, where policymakers have evidenced growing concern about "sticky" in

Join institutional investors, analysts and strategists from the world's largest banks: Subscribe today

View subscription options

Already have an account? log in

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

3 thoughts on “Wholesale Price Growth Slows In Welcome News For Battered Bonds

  1. The real question is how much room is there for bonds to move down in the event that CPI is bad tomorrow. If there’s not much more room for them to move down, while there’s certainly plenty of room for them to move up, then this is indeed a knife worth catching. That said, markets are so jumpy, illiquid, and leveraged, that I suspect risks are more evenly balanced–that there is actually plenty of room on the downside. To the extent that would certainly represent an overshoot, after the print would be the perfect time to buy the dip. Of course if CPI comes in mild, the professionals will guarantee that it’s far too late to buy the rip.

    No gamble no future.

NEWSROOM crewneck & prints