Tariffs Noise Hides Positive Inflation Developments

Markets have been overwhelmed lately by the administration’s fast-paced and, many times, highly uncertain tariff measures. So much so, that nobody seems to have realized that recent inflation numbers have come in better than expected, and the prospects for more good inflation numbers in March and April have the potential to push the year-over-year PCE inflation rate to the Federal Reserve (Fed) target of 2.0%.

We know why markets and analysts are not giving this milestone a great deal of importance. That is, we see the same thing they are seeing: that the achievement of the inflation target in March and April will be short-lived, as base effects will take the rate of inflation higher than 2.0% during the rest of the year. On top of that, everybody, including us, is expecting tariffs to take inflation even higher when all the proposed tariffs are implemented.

However, where we disagree with other analysts, economists, and markets is in believing that underlying inflation continues to be benign. That is, the disinflationary trends we started to see two years ago or so remain in place, and other than a potential hiccup caused by the imposition of tariffs, those underlying disinflationary trends will remain in place.

Financial investment versus economic investment

Economic students learn early in their economist career that investment in the financial market is not the same thing as investment in the ‘real’ economy. Financial investments help channel funds into the economy and are the blood that irrigates the economy. However, this investment does not explain how firms invest in the real economy, which is what firms do when they decide to invest in machinery and equipment, in the construction of new plants, in the construction of new residences, etc. This is the heart of any economy, and this heart is still positive, as measured by the surge in construction spending in manufacturing plants we have observed during the last two years (see chart below).

construction