Inflation just ran hotter than it has in three years. The bond market shrugged.
Hot, But No Surprise
Prices rose 4.2% over the past year in May, the biggest jump since 2023, and they rose 0.5% from April. Most of that came from higher energy prices tied to the Iran war.
The yearly rate has been climbing for months, up from 2.4% as recently as February.
Both numbers landed right where forecasters expected, and that match is the whole story behind the calm. Markets hate surprises, not the bad news they already saw coming.
There was even a bright spot, as core inflation came in softer than expected. Core inflation strips out food and gas to show the underlying trend, and it rose just 0.2% for the month.
A strategist at BlackRock said the high reading is mostly about energy, with no sign yet that it's spreading into everyday prices. Stripped of energy, the trend looks steadier than the headline suggests.
Shelter and services costs cooled a bit, which points the same way.
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Why Yields Didn't Budge
The 10-year Treasury yield is the interest rate the government pays to borrow for 10 years, and it sat almost still at 4.534%. The 2-year held at 4.131% and the 30-year at 5.013%, so the whole curve barely moved.
A bond yield usually jumps when inflation runs hot, because lenders want more to make up for rising prices. This time the data matched expectations, so there was nothing new to price in.
Think of it like a weather forecast. If the app says rain and it rains, nobody changes plans.
Yields and bond prices move in opposite directions, so a steady yield means buyers mostly stayed put. That also keeps mortgage and loan rates roughly where they were.
What To Watch
The report lands days before Kevin Warsh runs his first meeting as Fed chair, on June 16 and 17. The Fed is expected to hold rates steady this time.
Warsh takes over with prices running well above the Fed's 2% goal. Not long ago, a rate hike would have sounded far-fetched.
But hot prices are shifting the bets. Futures now point to a quarter-point rate hike by December, which is the market's best guess at the Fed's next move.
That's a sharp turn from last year, when investors were busy betting on cuts. May's wholesale prices come out Thursday and could move things again.
Wholesale prices are what businesses pay before goods reach store shelves. They often hint at where consumer prices head next.
For the first time in a while, the question isn't when the Fed cuts. It's whether it hikes.
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