Bitcoin Traders Should Watch Wider Inflation Metrics And Not Just CPI

By coindesk.com August 10, 2023 In Bitcoin, Federal Reserve

So, traders may feel encouraged to scale up exposure to risk assets, including bitcoin, should the data match estimates, validating the strengthening dovish expectations in the market. The Fed funds futures show traders believe the Fed’s rate hike cycle peaked in July and the central bank would cut rates next year.

Traders, however, are likely wrong in pricing rate cuts as forward-looking metrics point to stagflation ahead, Noelle Acheson, author of Crypto is Macro Now newsletter, explained during CoinDesk’s Twitter spaces event on Wednesday. The CPI data is backward-looking and exposed to base effects, which tend to hide the true picture.

While discussing the impending CPI release, Acheson took note of the recent surge in U.S. gasoline prices to the highest since October 2022 and the spike FOA food index price, the need to replenish the dwindling U.S. petroleum reserves and its bullish impact on oil prices. The CPI is sensitive to changes in oil prices.

Acheson added that the Cleveland Fed nowcast has headline CPI for July at 0.41%, more than double the consensus forecast of 0.2%. The model suggests an uptick in the inflation rate to 0.6% in August. That would amount to an annualized CPI rate of 7.4%.

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“Stagflation is the worst possible scenario for risk assets, particularly for stocks,” Acheson said, adding that compared to equities, the downside in bitcoin appears limited, considering current low participation from macro investors, the spot-ETF narrative and bitcoin’s gold-like appeal.

In a note to clients on Wednesday, analysts at ING said the latest uptick in bond market’s expectations for price pressures suggests the Fed’s inflation fight is not over yet and warned of continued elevated bond yields. Bitcoin has had an inverse relationship with the U.S. bond yields.

The U.S. 5-year, 5-year forward inflation expectations rate jumped to a 16-month high of 2.53% early this week, according to data source St. Louis Federal Reserve.

The #US 5-year forward #inflation expectation rate has jumped to 2.53, the highest since April 2022. Basically to where it in early days of the #Fed‘s rate hike cycle! pic.twitter.com/1qDDPzWuNL

— Omkar Godbole (@godbole17) August 8, 2023

“These are not awful levels when you consider where inflation was, and at least these expectations are still comfortably below 3%. But it’s the path they’ve been on that creates the issue, as that path has been pointing upwards. At the same time, there is an ongoing rise in food and energy prices in play, which risks adding to headline pressure down the line,” analysts at ING said in a note to clients early Thursday.

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“Given this backdrop, the U.S. 10yr has managed to remain above 4%, and we think it should continue to do so. And remember, once we get through tomorrow’s U.S. inflation report, we’ll likely see headline U.S. inflation closer to 3.5% than 3% and core U.S. inflation closer to 5% than 4%,” analysts added.

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