https://x.com/i/spaces/1wGWjaPNnLZKQ
Here’s a clean summary of the main points that were likely emphasized by Stefan Rust, E.J. Antoni, Jim Bianco, Michael Green, and the rest of the panel:
### 1. **CPI Came in Hot (3.8%) – Mostly Driven by Shelter**
- The headline CPI surprised to the upside, but the biggest culprit was the **lagging Shelter component** (which makes up ~36% of CPI).
- Shelter inflation is a “rear-view mirror” indicator — it reflects rents and housing costs from 6–12 months ago, meaning the hot reading is still catching up to past trends rather than signaling new acceleration.
### 2. **Energy Shock Added Fuel**
- Higher oil and gasoline prices (due to geopolitical tensions, especially Iran-related disruptions) contributed meaningfully to the monthly increase.
- This is viewed as largely **transitory**, but it complicates the Fed’s job in the short term.
### 3. **Core Inflation Remains Sticky**
- Even excluding food and energy, core CPI is not falling as fast as hoped. This reinforces the “higher for longer” narrative for interest rates.
### 4. **Implications for the Federal Reserve**
- The odds of a rate cut in June or July dropped sharply after this print.
- The Fed is now more likely to stay on hold or move very cautiously. Several panelists argued the Fed is behind the curve on inflation persistence.
- Michael Green and Jim Bianco are vocal about the risk of policy error if the Fed cuts too early.
### 5. **Broader Economic Picture**
- The economy is **bifurcated**: Strong corporate earnings and AI-related growth vs. weakening consumer spending in lower- and middle-income brackets.
- The panel has highlighted that while Wall Street (S&P 500) is doing well, Main Street is feeling the pressure from higher prices.
### 6. **Market Implications**
- Higher inflation expectations → Support for bond yields staying elevated.
- Potential short-term pressure on growth stocks and high-valuation names.
- Continued strength expected in commodities, energy, and certain real assets.
**Overall Tone of the Space**:
Cautious to mildly bearish on near-term Fed policy and risk assets, with emphasis on the persistent nature of shelter inflation and the challenges it creates for a soft landing.
Dr. K's comment: AI effect is pronounced which could continue to drive markets higher overall. We will continue to monitor price volume action of leading stocks that will determine buying and selling pressure thus best actionable entries on both the long and short side.
Here’s a clean summary of the main points that were likely emphasized by Stefan Rust, E.J. Antoni, Jim Bianco, Michael Green, and the rest of the panel:
### 1. **CPI Came in Hot (3.8%) – Mostly Driven by Shelter**
- The headline CPI surprised to the upside, but the biggest culprit was the **lagging Shelter component** (which makes up ~36% of CPI).
- Shelter inflation is a “rear-view mirror” indicator — it reflects rents and housing costs from 6–12 months ago, meaning the hot reading is still catching up to past trends rather than signaling new acceleration.
### 2. **Energy Shock Added Fuel**
- Higher oil and gasoline prices (due to geopolitical tensions, especially Iran-related disruptions) contributed meaningfully to the monthly increase.
- This is viewed as largely **transitory**, but it complicates the Fed’s job in the short term.
### 3. **Core Inflation Remains Sticky**
- Even excluding food and energy, core CPI is not falling as fast as hoped. This reinforces the “higher for longer” narrative for interest rates.
### 4. **Implications for the Federal Reserve**
- The odds of a rate cut in June or July dropped sharply after this print.
- The Fed is now more likely to stay on hold or move very cautiously. Several panelists argued the Fed is behind the curve on inflation persistence.
- Michael Green and Jim Bianco are vocal about the risk of policy error if the Fed cuts too early.
### 5. **Broader Economic Picture**
- The economy is **bifurcated**: Strong corporate earnings and AI-related growth vs. weakening consumer spending in lower- and middle-income brackets.
- The panel has highlighted that while Wall Street (S&P 500) is doing well, Main Street is feeling the pressure from higher prices.
### 6. **Market Implications**
- Higher inflation expectations → Support for bond yields staying elevated.
- Potential short-term pressure on growth stocks and high-valuation names.
- Continued strength expected in commodities, energy, and certain real assets.
**Overall Tone of the Space**:
Cautious to mildly bearish on near-term Fed policy and risk assets, with emphasis on the persistent nature of shelter inflation and the challenges it creates for a soft landing.
Dr. K's comment: AI effect is pronounced which could continue to drive markets higher overall. We will continue to monitor price volume action of leading stocks that will determine buying and selling pressure thus best actionable entries on both the long and short side.