We Have Seen Peak U.S. CPI, But Not Peak Inflation Pressures

 | May 16, 2022 08:46

For starters, let’s make sure everyone is on the same page. The CPI report last week establishes (as expected) that the prior report that pegged CPI at 8.5% is likely 'Peak CPI' for this cycle. But this does not mean that prices are going to decline. Peak CPI means that the rate of increase will slow, but if you are waiting for new car prices to go back down, you will be waiting a long time.

Speaking of cars... Remember how the spike in used car prices was due to one-off disasters, the inability to buy new cars, the shortage in supply coming from rental fleets in 2021, etcetera, so much so that in some cases used cars were costing as much as new cars? And remember how we heard that this was ridiculous, so used car prices would have to decline when the “supply chain constraints” were solved?

Well, guess what. That incongruity is being resolved, but it’s being resolved by new car prices rising, not by used car prices declining. Which, actually, is what you naturally would expect if you noticed that the amount of money in circulation was 40% higher now than at the end of 2019, so all prices ought to end up averaging about 40% higher ceteris paribus.