Good morning. The market didn’t crash on fears of stagflation yesterday, after a colder than anticipated shopper worth index report (extra on that under). However there’s nonetheless loads of tariff uncertainty for traders to cope with. Europe and Canada retaliated in opposition to Washington yesterday, after the US’s world aluminium and metal tariffs went into impact; extra nations might reply quickly. What these responses will probably be is anybody’s guess, and nobody is aware of whether or not they’ll deliver President Donald Trump to the negotiating desk or invite extra retribution. For those who needed to tariff one US good, what would it not be? E mail me your pitch: aiden.reiter@ft.com.
CPI
The sound you simply heard was the market respiratory a sigh of aid. Regardless of worries that yesterday’s CPI report would are available scorching and sign impending stagflation, it got here in colder than anticipated. The headline studying fell from 3 per cent in January to 2.8 per cent in February, and core slid from 3.3 per cent to three.1 per cent — placing it under December’s comparatively chilly studying of three.2:
The turnaround from final month’s scorching studying is starker when Unhedged’s most popular measure, the annualised change in month-on-month core CPI:

The annualised change was 2.8 per cent in February, making January’s 5.5 per cent surge appear to be an anomaly — or, maybe, a results of the so-called January impact, the occasional incapability of the index’s seasonal changes to deal with the annual worth will increase that happen firstly of yearly.
Most of the worth pressures that pushed last month’s studying up have subsided. Used automobile and truck worth inflation cooled off, as did worth rises for shelter and automobile insurance coverage. Some even reversed: airline fares, which rose 1.2 per cent in January, had been down by 4 per cent final month. Fairness traders took this all as excellent news. The S&P 500 completed barely up, after falling for 2 consecutive days, and cyclical shares — particularly information tech and shopper discretionary — posted recoveries.
However earlier than the fairness market will get forward of itself, it should be famous: this was not a very good report. By our most popular measure, inflation was greater in February than in December, the final time we mentioned issues had been cooling off. We’ve been kind of caught for the reason that autumn, and issues may very well be heating up once more. Take shelter inflation, a giant a part of the index which frequently lags behind different worth classes:

It’s been extraordinarily jumpy for the previous few months. Although February’s one-month annualised studying was under the January pick-up, shelter inflation was greater in February than in December and September, when Unhedged and plenty of different pundits referred to as time of death on housing inflation.
There have been additionally some dangerous numbers lurking in yesterday’s information. The Federal Reserve tends to favor PCE as an inflation measure over CPI. As Thomas Ryan at Capital Economics mentioned in a latest notice, “the parts [from CPI] which feed into the Fed’s most popular PCE worth index rose extra sharply” in February, as in comparison with January. Particularly, pc providers and equipment, jewelry, and family home equipment got here in hotter than anticipated, as did a number of costs linked to providers; all three items classes have very low weightings in CPI, however make up a bigger portion of PCE, based on Omair Sharif at Inflation Insights. Consequently, many analysts and banks have dialled up their PCE expectations for later this month.
Buyers appear attuned to this — although strikes in Treasuries and futures markets had been muted. Break-even inflation, or the market’s expectation of inflation, ticked up two foundation factors yesterday, driving a 3 foundation level enhance in 10-year Treasury yields. Futures implied price cuts by the Fed had been downgraded, too. Extra market contributors began betting on fewer price cuts than Wednesday’s consensus of three 25 foundation level cuts by 12 months finish:

We might have prevented an instantaneous market meltdown. However the inflation image is usually unchanged. We may nonetheless see the results of tariffs handed by way of to customers. And, on the entire, costs look hotter than simply two months in the past. This was only a momentary reprieve of stagflation fears, not a salve. Right this moment’s PPI must also be revealing.
Two Classes
On Tuesday, China concluded its most essential annual gatherings: the Nationwide Folks’s Congress (NPC) and the Chinese language Folks’s Political Consultative Convention (CPPCC), colloquially the “Two Classes”. The conferences coincide yearly, and supply the federal government a possibility to current its coverage agenda and priorities.
This 12 months’s Two Classes befell below radically completely different market circumstances than final 12 months’s. In March 2024, Chinese language equities had been nonetheless within the doldrums, and bonds had been in a downward spiral. However this 12 months the market outlook is far rosier. Some animal spirits are nonetheless in Chinese language equities, after final month’s DeepSeek revelation and the leaderships re-embrace of Alibaba founder Jack Ma:
Hong Kong’s Hold Seng index is above the degrees it reached in final September’s rally; the mainland CSI index has been sideways for a number of weeks, however is close to its September highs, too. Lengthy-tenured Chinese language bond yields stopped their years-long fall final month, and rose prior to now few weeks:

Most of what got here out of the Two Classes appeared custom-made to help the market traits. The state unveiled a start-up steerage fund of 1tn renminbi ($138bn) to help the AI sector, and, based on numerous reports, tech was the most popular matter of dialogue at each gatherings. The federal government additionally doubled down on progress: it set its annual GDP goal at 5 per cent and boosted its annual official fiscal deficit allowance from 3 per cent of GDP to 4 per cent to help its stimulus objectives. The federal government additionally inspired looser financial coverage, whereas reducing its official inflation goal from 3 per cent to “round” 2 per cent.
But, this was all principally lip service. The market welcomes an additional embrace of tech. However there’s not a lot depth to the expansion commitments. China’s progress goal was 5 per cent final 12 months, too, and it barely scraped by; with incoming stress from US tariffs, Beijing’s tried-and-true technique of boosting exports will face new challenges.
The rise to the deficit will not be actually a shift in coverage, both. In impact, China shifted its tone in direction of the nationwide deficit final 12 months, when it mentioned it might stimulate the financial system. The official steerage supplies a bit extra readability, whereas nonetheless not giving any particulars on when and the way the stimulus will hit. In accordance with Alicia García-Herrero and her staff at Natixis, the upper deficit will even not end result within the consumption growth that the market has hoped for:
[Given that] the introduced enhance within the fiscal deficit doesn’t appear to be directed to boosting consumption however moderately to supporting the debt restructuring of native governments, one shouldn’t count on consumption traits to enhance considerably in 2025.
China already pivoted to looser financial coverage final 12 months, too — and it’s not prefer it has a lot of a alternative. The nation is combating deflation; each headline and core CPI turned unfavorable in February. It must decrease charges. And altering its inflation goal appears extra like a concession to actuality than an precise coverage shift.

Taken collectively, this does bear some in poor health omens for the remainder of the world, although. To attain its high-growth objectives, the Chinese language financial system appears set to rely much more on juicing exports; that policymakers are more and more resigned to deflation suggests Chinese language items may get cheaper for international consumers. That places the nation on extra of a collision path with rising protectionism within the EU and US.
However, at the very least for the fairness market within the brief time period, the convention was principally excellent news. Outdoors of stimulus, a Chinese language authorities devoted to supporting tech and prepared to get out of the non-public sector’s method is basically all of the nation’s fairness traders can hope for.
One good learn
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