Inflation and earnings
The US Federal Reserve’s (Fed) favourite inflation measure, PCE, will be released on Friday. Economists expect the January figure to drop back by 0.1% to 2.5%. The core number, which removes volatile food and energy costs, is forecast to drop back to 2.6% after three months at 2.8%. If this number falls back toward 2% over the coming months, that will give the Fed more confidence to cut its benchmark interest rate.
Lower interest rates mean cheaper borrowing, which makes it easier for households and businesses to increase spending on other, more fun and productive, things. It also makes lending new money and holding cash in the bank less attractive. That, in turn, encourages people to take more risk with their money to get higher returns. That’s another way of saying it encourages households and businesses to invest more, which leads to more employment and commercial opportunities for everyone. In the round, that’s the reason why lower rates push the value of stocks and bonds higher.
The exception to this, of course, is when rates are falling because the economy is already in or fast approaching a recession. At that point, the risks of company profits falling markedly and investments going bust because of the bad business environment override the benefits of easier borrowing. You also find investors cashing out of investments to ensure they have the spare money to pay their own bills and make it through a rough patch.
In recent months, investors’ hopes of a continued fall in the US benchmark interest rate have shrivelled as inflation has reaccelerated and tariffs threats and general policy uncertainty have grown. Investors expect the Fed to keep its rate at the current band between 4.25% and 4.50% until July.
This could easily change as more information tumbles out of the US. But, for now, American stocks will need to rely on better profits to deliver returns to shareholders. Expecting shares to appreciate because investors put a higher value on each dollar of profit (relying solely on a higher price-earnings multiple) will be less rewarding than it has been in the past couple of years.
These figures refer to past performance, which isn’t a reliable indicator of future returns. The value of investments and the income from them may go down as well as up and you may not get back what you originally invested.