US inflation came in exactly where economists expected in May. rose 4.2% year-on-year, matching forecasts and marking the highest reading in three years.
Many investors will look at that outcome and conclude there were no surprises. I believe that would be a serious mistake.
Just because the number was expected does not mean it is good.
A 4.2% inflation rate is a problem for the . It is a problem for markets. And it is a problem for investors who continue to assume that lower interest rates are approaching.
The significance of this report goes well beyond the headline figure itself. It arrives at a pivotal moment for US monetary policy and lands directly on the desk of Kevin Warsh as he prepares for his first Federal Open Market Committee meeting as chairman.
Many expected Warsh to inherit a central bank focused on the timing and pace of rate cuts. Instead, he has inherited an economy where inflation is accelerating again, oil prices are climbing, employment remains robust and consumer demand continues to hold up remarkably well.
That is a very different challenge.
Central bank credibility is established early. New leaders understand that markets are watching for signals about priorities, discipline and resolve. Warsh now faces a test that few expected only months ago.
Inflation is moving further away from the Federal Reserve’s objective, not closer to it.
Financial markets have spent much of this year building a narrative around easier monetary policy. Investors became increasingly comfortable with the belief that inflation was heading steadily lower and that rate reductions would naturally follow.
Recent economic data has steadily chipped away at that assumption. Today’s inflation report delivers a much more direct challenge.
The latest figures show inflation accelerating from 3.8% in April to 4.2% in May. also moved higher, reinforcing concerns that underlying price pressures remain more persistent than many had hoped.
Meanwhile, the broader economy continues to demonstrate resilience. Employment remains strong. Consumers are still spending. Economic activity remains firm.
Taken together, those conditions create a difficult environment for any central bank seeking justification for easier policy.
Oil prices add another complication.
Rising geopolitical tensions have pushed energy prices higher, creating fresh inflationary pressure at precisely the wrong time. Energy costs feed into transportation, manufacturing and household spending, increasing the risk that broader price pressures remain elevated for longer than markets currently anticipate.
For investors, the implications are substantial.
Markets are being forced to abandon the comfortable assumption that lower rates are around the corner. Expectations for policy easing are being pushed further into the future and attention is increasingly turning to a possibility many investors had largely dismissed: the risk that the next move from the Federal Reserve is not down, but up.
Such a shift would matter enormously.
Higher rates support the dollar, raise borrowing costs and tighten financial conditions globally. Equity sectors that have benefited from expectations of easier policy face greater scrutiny. Companies carrying heavy debt burdens become more vulnerable. Valuations that appeared reasonable under a falling-rate scenario begin to look much less attractive.
Investors should not underestimate how quickly sentiment can change once markets begin repricing the policy outlook.
None of this means opportunities disappear.
Periods of adjustment often create some of the most compelling opportunities for disciplined investors. Businesses with strong balance sheets, durable earnings, healthy cash generation and meaningful pricing power are often well positioned during periods of economic uncertainty.
Quality becomes increasingly important. Financial strength becomes increasingly important. Selectivity becomes increasingly important.
Successful investing is rarely about predicting every economic release correctly. It is about recognising changes in the environment before they become fully reflected in asset prices.
That is why I believe investors should focus less on whether the Federal Reserve acts next week and more on what Kevin Warsh signals about the months ahead.
The market still appears overly focused on the timing of future rate cuts. Inflation at 4.2% suggests a different conversation is now required.
My view is straightforward. The balance of risks has shifted materially. Inflation remains a serious threat, the economy remains resilient and the Federal Reserve has little reason to sound comfortable.
Investors who continue positioning exclusively for lower rates are making an increasingly risky bet.
The inflation numbers may have arrived exactly as expected.
Their implications should not be.
