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Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favorite tales on this weekly e-newsletter.
Good morning. Walmart’s CEO warned yesterday that tariffs would drive it to lift costs this 12 months — even after the latest lower in duties on China. The retail large stated final quarter that it didn’t know the way a lot tariffs would have an effect on the core enterprise. It seems to know extra now, and the information is just not good for shoppers. Electronic mail us: robert.armstrong@ft.com, aiden.reiter@ft.com and hakyung.kim@ft.com.
Gold
The opposite day on the Unhedged podcast, I speculated that maybe gold, which hit the astonishing stage of $3,250 a couple of weeks in the past and has drifted sideways ever since, may need put in its long-term excessive. My reasoning for that is embarrassingly easy: we’ve reached peak tariff nervousness — and maybe peak Trump nervousness — and the worth is already actually excessive.
My colleague Toby Nangle heard the podcast and despatched alongside this chart from the newest Financial institution of America International Fund Supervisor Survey:

The very best-ever proportion of managers within the survey assume gold is overvalued — virtually 50 per cent (mild blue columns). However that’s not the fascinating bit. The fascinating bit is that the final two occasions a number of managers agreed that gold was overvalued, in 2020 and in 2011, they had been proper. Take a look at how gold carried out subsequently (darkish blue line). After 2011’s fall, it took a decade for gold to retake its excessive in nominal phrases.
Often, if you ask a bunch of traders whether or not one thing is under- or overvalued, and a bunch of them agree, the factor to do is run the opposite approach. A deep consensus can solely do two issues for an asset’s worth. It will possibly keep like it’s (no worth motion) or it might probably reverse (worth goes in opposition to the outdated consensus). There simply aren’t very many individuals outdoors of the primary view left to transform, which causes the consensus to collapse on itself — rewarding those that went in opposition to the grain. Investor sentiment has truly tended to be proper with gold, nevertheless, and I don’t know why.
Hamad Hussain of Capital Economics agrees that consensus could also be proper this time, too, and gold might be rangebound for some time. He notes that the final two large rallies (1976-1982, 2008-2012) lasted three to 4 years, and by that customary this one is beginning to age. And his staff expects the greenback to rebound within the medium time period, which might be a headwind. He additionally factors out that gold ETF inflows — which, in a break with historical past, haven’t been an enormous contributor to this rally — are actually rising. The important thing marginal consumers within the rally have been institutional consumers, particularly in Asia, in addition to central banks. However ETF consumers are principally monetary consumers within the west, who’re delicate to issues akin to greenback energy and actual US rates of interest. If monetary consumers are in cost, these components will assert themselves once more, probably to gold’s detriment. Right here is Hussain’s fairly dramatic chart:

The gold worth is tough to grasp, nevertheless it at all times appears to be saying one thing fascinating.
Inflation expectations
A month in the past we observed that whereas long-term inflation expectations had been steady and never contributing a lot to rising bond yields, short-term inflation expectations (as measured by inflation swaps) had been rising quick. Tariff worries seemed to be translating into expectations of a brief burst of inflation, however not sustained worth rises. Markets might have anticipated tariff-induced inflation to be transitory, or an inflation-killing progress slowdown, or each.
That pattern has reversed — partially. Longer-term inflation expectations (pink and light-weight blue strains) have been ticking up since mid-April, and short-term expectations (darkish blue line) for inflation fell dramatically after the Trump administration reined within the tariffs on China:

It’s clear that the prospect of decrease tariffs on China — whose low-cost items assist preserve US costs down — is inflicting markets to downgrade their short-term worth expectations. Good. The rise in longer-term expectations can be good, a minimum of to the extent it displays higher progress expectations. The US financial system remains to be fairly sturdy, and with out the tariff dampener, it may keep that approach. Stagflation appears to be coming off the desk.
However this additionally raises questions for the market and, crucially, the Federal Reserve. Again in April, we had been quite involved about short-term inflation. Now that worry is shifting to the long run. Because the Fed continuously factors out, a key metric in its price choice is long-term inflation expectations. If they’re in test, the Fed has extra flexibility to decrease charges. If longer-term inflation expectations proceed rising — creeping in the direction of 3 per cent — the Fed might need to preserve charges increased for longer, even when there’s weak spot within the labour market.
And there’s purpose to assume they’ll proceed rising. Lengthy-term inflation expectations are round the place they had been proper earlier than “liberation day” — however tariffs are a lot increased at present than on April 1 (a 30 per cent tariff on China will nonetheless be felt, as Walmart has simply identified). It’s potential that earlier than “liberation day” the market anticipated even worse; Trump did float 10 per cent international tariffs, and 60 per cent on China in the course of the marketing campaign. The market might have additionally purchased into the “Taco” commerce, and thinks tariffs will quickly be decrease nonetheless. But, if the 30 per cent is locked in for the long run, inflationary pressures may rise all throughout the curve. And we already had been on a rising pattern:

Discover the step change after Covid-19. That is what the Fed has been combating in opposition to for almost three years now: increased inflation expectations, on account of sturdy progress and the soar in costs in 2022. The bond market thinks we’re nonetheless in a higher-inflation regime, probably for the lengthy haul.
The bond market doesn’t know something the remainder of us don’t. It received’t type a agency opinion in regards to the inflation outlook till tariff coverage turns into clear. If it ever does.
(Reiter)
One good learn
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