A surprising downside shock in U.S. CPI inflation on Tuesday was followed by the first major public remarks from recently confirmed Fed Chair Kevin Warsh to U.S. lawmakers. The CPI print undoubtedly gives the Fed some breathing room, but it will be limited.
Even if headline and core inflation drift further away from 4% in the coming months, oil is rising again and the economy is still running hot. The Fed's 2% target remains some way off, and we are now into the sixth year of above-target inflation. Warsh repeated his commitment to price stability, as one would expect, but he'll be hoping PCE follows CPI and buys him more time.
Chinese imports surged 36% in June, the fastest rise in five years. A sign that domestic demand is finally recovering, right? Not quite. Export growth continues to soar too, especially autos and AI-related goods, putting the country on track for another $1 trillion-plus trade surplus this year.
June investment and retail sales figures on Wednesday will offer further insight into how the domestic economy is faring, and Beijing will also release Q2 GDP. The consensus is for 4.5% growth, down from 5.0% in Q1.
If you wanted evidence of brewing AI-related equity volatility, you got it on Tuesday — in spades — from U.S. computer giant IBM. Shares plunged a record 25% after the company said it had "faltered" in keeping pace with a shift in corporate spending from software to data-center infrastructure and would take a big earnings hit in Q2.
The fall was even steeper than its fall on "Black Monday" on 19 October, 1987, still the biggest single-day decline on record for Wall Street's main indexes. Realized volatility in single stocks is rising, and in big names too, as IBM shows. It still hasn't spilled over into meaningful index volatility yet, but what if the next 20%+ pop is in one of the "Mag 7" stocks?