Market Brief: The Inflation Floor Just Shifted — Wall Street Isn't Ready
January core PPI surged 0.8%, blowing past expectations. The disinflation story isn't dead — but it just took a serious hit. Here's what that means now.
The number landed hard: core PPI up 0.8% in January, topping December's already-uncomfortable 0.6%.
That's not noise. That's a pattern.
The Tide Has Stopped Going Out
For two years, markets priced in disinflation as a near-certainty — structural, smooth, nearly complete. Producer prices are the upstream warning system for what consumers eventually pay. Right now, that system is amber, turning red.
Yes, the counter-argument exists. PPI-to-CPI transmission isn't guaranteed. Services, not goods, still dominate the consumer inflation picture. One month isn't a trend.
But pair this miss with UBS quietly downgrading U.S. equities to benchmark — citing fading structural tailwinds — before rate-cut expectations fully reprice, and the picture sharpens fast. When a historically bullish major bank starts hedging its U.S. overweight this early, you don't dismiss it.
Where to Look Before the Next CPI Print
My read: duration exposure in bond-heavy allocations deserves a hard second look. Rate-sensitive growth names still priced for imminent Fed cuts are living on borrowed time.
The soft-landing narrative isn't buried. But it just took a credible body blow.
Don't react. Reposition — before the next CPI date forces your hand.
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