“In aggregate today’s inflation readings are encouraging, albeit still above the Federal Reserve’s stated 2% inflation target. Yet, we think the overall inflation trend can continue to moderate over the next year … as inflation breakevens have recently suggested, allowing the Fed to maintain its bias toward rate cuts.” — Rick Rieder, head of fixed income at BlackRock and a finalist for Fed chair to succeed Jerome Powell next year.
“Look beneath the headline and what one sees on a year ago basis are large increases in the cost of food, meat, housing, and utilities. Middle class & down-market households experiencing a slowing pace of wage growth are clearly having difficulty adjusting to persisting increases in the cost of living … It’s only natural that those that inhibit the lower spur of the K ask: what is it that those celebrating a more modest increase in the pace of price increases see that indicates inflation is not eroding my bottom line & standard of living?” — Joseph Brusuelas, chief economist at RSK, on the K-shaped economy.
“Signs of spillovers from tariffs remain weak and support the view that tariff hikes will translate into a one-off bump in prices instead of persistent inflationary pressures,” Krishna Guha, head of global policy and central bank strategy at Evercore ISM.