Potential market moves in a lower-than-expected US CPI print
Conversely, few want to get set in outright bearish risk positions in case we get a below-expectations US core CPI print, with core CPI below 0.3% m/m and certainly sub-0.25%. Relief would ripple through markets, with high short-interest names, lower quality plays and high growth equity going hard. As we saw from the sectors and factors in today’s session, growth and momentum have worked well, with buyback names outperforming.
One suspects a low CPI print would bring a June cut (from the Fed) more firmly onto the table, which the rates market prices at a coin toss.
This scenario would offer a solid runway for US earnings with the big US banks/money centres likely offering further tailwinds to risk. That said, the tape of the XLF ETF (US financial sector ETF) already reflects this vibe, with price having rallied 33% since October and the financial sector outperforming the S&P500 by 1.6% YTD.
Gold has worked well in a rising and falling rate environment – it is an out-and-out momentum play and until price can close below the 5-day EMA then the path of least resistance is skewed higher. Would a stronger CPI print matter for gold? Ironically, given calls that it worked as an inflation hedge, a big CPI print would promote gold sellers into the mix and see some of the heat coming out. I also think gold has a larger upside move on a downside CPI surprise, with gold ETF inflows a new source of upside potential.