Everything is about to get more expensive. It's a crucial next step for the US economic recovery. - But they told us printing money won't cause inflation?



Everything is about to get more expensive. It's a crucial next step for the US economic recovery.​


  • The US economy is headed for a rebound, but it'll make things more expensive for Americans.
  • Experts say the economy won't overheat, but more demand for things like homes and gas will mean higher prices.
  • This is good; inflation like this is a sign of a return to normal and a healthy economic recovery.
  • Visit the Business section of Insider for more stories.

Experts are growing increasingly hopeful the US economy will rebound in 2021, but there's a price to pay for that. The price of most things, actually.

A vaccine rollout, a $1.9 trillion stimulus package, and the lift in spending from December's smaller stimulus paint a promising picture of a roaring, reopened America with lively restaurants, indoor dancing, and crowded stadiums. The economy is set for "stellar" growth as the pandemic subsides, a Bank of America note stated Monday, while boosting its 2021 GDP growth estimate to 6.5% from 6%.

It could all be the biggest boomtime in the US economy in a generation — but not without a cost.

While history indicates that the US likely won't see an overheated economy after Biden's massive stimulus package launches, Wall Street is predicting that certain goods and services might become more expensive.

JPMorgan's David Kelly wrote in a recent bank note that high demand could "boost prices" across a range of services as the pandemic recedes over the summer, "maintaining inflation at or above" the Federal Reserve's 2% target. And Mark Haefele, the chief investment officer of global wealth management at UBS, wrote on Tuesday that while fears about persistent rise in inflation are likely "overdone," his bank is predicting that inflation may spike in the short-term.

"If pent-up demand emerges, prices could even rise above their pre-pandemic levels," Brian Rose, senior economist at UBS Global Wealth Management, told Insider.

This may not be friendly news for Americans' wallets, but higher prices and a demand for commodities without overheating is a sign of a healthier economy and a crucial next step toward the US' economic recovery.

Rising Treasury yields — a famous barometer for future inflation — were in evidence this week, and Wall Street economists see signs that everyday essentials like houses, gas, and healthcare are about to get more expensive.

Stronger inflation? Treasurys say so

The Treasury market spoke up this past week. The 10-year yield, after steadily climbing through February, leaped as high as 1.614% on Thursday. The note now trades with its highest yield in more than a year, and President Joe Biden's stimulus proposal is driving the economic optimism largely reponsible for this bond-market movement.

This matters because Treasury yields, especially in the 10-year, are an indicator of what investors think about the likelihood of inflation. It also matters because it could become a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Investors have largely priced in the $1.9 trillion in relief set to be approved by Democrats in the next few weeks. Supporters argue a large-scale deal is needed to bring the economy back to its past strength. Republicans have voiced concerns that the package will overfill the hole in the economy and spark rampant price growth.

Markets, at least for now, are siding with the Democrats. Expectations for stronger inflation lifted yields as investors demanded higher returns to offset price growth. The continued rotation to cyclical assets — those most likely to outperform during a rebound — saw cash rotate from defensive investments and to riskier plays.

But rising yields have consequences. Since Treasurys serve as a benchmark for the broader credit market, higher yields signal regular payments on consumer loans will soon swing higher.

Rates on car loans, for example, closely track the 5-year yield, Kathy Bostjancic, head US financial market economist at Oxford Economists, told Insider. Those notes saw outsize selling through the week as investors bet on a sharp but temporary rise in inflation.

Higher yields can be the canary in the coal mine for commodity prices. Treasurys reveal how investors expect the economy to perform in the future, and those expectations can influence current spending activity. Since commodity markets focus so much on contracts for future sales and purchases, yields influence those forward price curves.

"Heating oil and natural gas could perhaps be a problem," Bostjancic said.

To be sure, yields are far from flashing warning signs of rampant inflation. Real yields, which subtract inflation from bonds' nominal yields, are still negative across all maturities. Though the 10-year yield sits near one-year highs, negative real yields suggest investors aren't yet fearful of uncontrollable price growth.

In fact, real yields began turning negative in 2019, well before the pandemic roiled the US economy. The recent uptick in yields is a healthy development, but the pace risks shocking the financial system at a critical turning point, Bostjancic said.

"The bottom line is the 10-year and the yield curve could have a ways to run, and that's not necessarily negative," she said. "But if it happens too rapidly, then it can be destabilizing. It could choke off this nascent recovery before it gets going."

Homes, gas, and healthcare

So, what does this all mean for Americans' wallets?

Well, the answer largely depends on what Americans want to spend money on the most. A UBS note this week predicted that largely looks like entertainment, personal services, and education — all key drivers in the experience economy.

"The biggest price increases are likely to be seen as a rebound to normal levels in those services that have been hit hardest [by the] pandemic," Rose said, citing airfare and hotel stays as examples.

Gas, too, is going to get expensive. A recent Jefferies note revealed the energy sector has already seen a 23.6% increase in CPI, a bigger uptick than any other industry, as cars increased in popularity during the pandemic. Oil prices increased from $40 per barrel last summer to nearly $60 per barrel at present and will likely stay that way through 2021, per the JPMorgan note.

A pandemic, naturally, has also driven health spending up. The healthcare sector has seen a 14.7% increase in CPI, per Jefferies, signaling that Americans will have to pay even more for health care than they already are.

Then, there's housing. The market has been booming, but buying a house has become more expensive. Interest rates hit a historic low in 2020, but the higher treasury yields signal that may be about to change. As of Thursday, mortgage rates climbed back to their highest level since August.

Mortgage lenders will hike up rates for borrowers to compensate for higher yields as they trade mortgage-backed securities on the bond market. "The market is looking out two or three years and thinking that rates are going to rise," Todd Johnson, a division manager in Wells Fargo's mortgage unit, told The Financial Times.

More expensive, but in a good way​

Since price increases will be driven by stronger demand, Rose said, it's an "encouraging sign that the impact of the pandemic is waning and life is returning to normal."

The Treasury market's latest moves suggest the Democrats' stimulus package will prompt a sharp but temporary rise in price growth. Where inflation settles in the long term depends on how well the labor market heals, Seema Shah, chief strategist at Principal Global Investors, told Insider.

The Fed has indicated it won't raise rates until it sees progress toward full employment. Once inflation runs hot for a period and unemployment declines, the central bank will move toward tamping down on inflation with higher interest rates.

Judging by the Treasury market, nobody expects the US to face runaway price increases, Shah said.

"The market is saying growth is going to be higher, therefore labor-market slack is going to disappear a lot quicker than people were anticipating," she said. "And therefore the Fed will actually hike earlier than expected, and by hiking earlier than expected, we're not going to see inflation take off."
 
I think I'd rather just die a celibate.

Expect more inflation good narrative main stream media articles coming up. Biden is the president and fed has pumped trillions to the asset market. The reason they are apprehensive with the stimulus checks to the general populations is that it would make the inflation clear as day much sooner.
If Trump was still president it would be an article about how he caused the hyperinflation and how bad it is. I'd say these propaganda outlets need to up their game and keep their story straight, but the useful idiots will believe whatever drivel they write. They could write an article tomorrow about how it was actually Biden who created the Space Force and how good of an idea it is and the twittards would eat it up.
 
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Now is a great time to invest in family and frens. Not conditional or superficial people, people who really care for you and stick by you through thick and thin.

That way even if everything goes to shit, you'll still have some great people in your life
>implying people like that actually exist

nigga have you fucking met me?
 
How is reopening the economy not the most crucial next step?

Just fucking open everything back the fuck up.

There is no way you can convince me they are not manufacturing a depression at this point. It is the only reason to ignore reality and keep pushing WuFlu fear so hard that businesses are still under foot.
 
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Tranny says "I met a 20 something tall dark and handsome guy online" I'm pressing :disagree: on that one lads.
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is this really how they're going to approach this looming economic crisis caused by us printing whole percents of our national debt on multiple occasions all at once

by phrasing it as a "transitional period"

i'm mcfucking done

Yeah, inflation is a great sign we're heading in the right direction! Don't forget-- we have two weeks to slow the spread! Don't forget to thank your nurses and NPs as they organize a coordinated default dance during their nightshift, and be grateful when your governor writes an executive order allowing him to have sex with your wife and use local law enforcement to force you to watch.
Should've died then, I missed my chance
The struggle to live can be beautiful, too.
 
Remember folks, this all started over 100 years ago, with a Private Bank known as the FED, unconstitutional Fiat "money", and a few Small Hats. You have been enslaved to a ponzi scheme since birth, your parents as well as their parents were enslaved to it. Your purchasing power and share of God's money (precious metals) were stolen from your family over generations, leaving you with nothing but a Dieversified, Plastic-fenced, bankrupt America. "Temporary" taxes like income tax are still around decades later, and the invisible tax called inflation bleeds you dry. The Heeb former FEDhead Yellen is now in control of the American Treasury, with a dementia-ridden pedophile **President at the helm. The current regime is so #legitamate that it comes with its own cohort of Praetorian guard weekend warriors to keep the senseless Caesar installed. This situation is untenable, the economy will continue to collapse, the currency will continue to be debased until it returns to the origin of all Fiat, which is inherently 0. Buy some PMs now before the 1929-tier moment. Corrupt and knowingly evil Retards control our governments.
 
Fuuuuck, and I was just saving up to get a nice townhouse, too. Oh well, it's not like ((they)) wanted me to succeed - after all, I'm just a dirty Uncle Tom who wandered off the plantation to vote for the Bad Orange Man. Guess this is my just desserts for hoping that this country could actually do something in its own interests for once in its life. *sigh*

:optimistic: of you to think that that anger won't be squashed faster than a goddamn fly on a hot summer's day - e.g., the 1/6 Capitol protest insurrection.
Depends if their beloved joggers and antifags are looting as well.
This time the GOP will probably enable the rioting as the Biden administration faces the choice of either:
- finally dumping the niggers and concentrating fully on the Hispanics by throwing the book at them for all of woke twitter and progressive Shaneequas to "reee" loudly.
- allow them to loot, rob, and do as they please as insurance companies "ree" nationwide.

First time you try to spend a gold coin, everybody will know you've got gold, so bye bye you go.
- Which is where the guns and ammo come into play. Bullets are very inclusive/progressive.
- Why would you be negotiating among ferals?
 
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So if i bought a place and then the hyper inflation hits. I should be able to take my wheelbarrow of Biden bucks to buy my daily bread to the bank instead and pay off my place, right? On paper it costs X dollary doos and I'm bringing them exactly that. Not my fault that the money isn't worth the paper it's printed on.
 
How is reopening the economy not the most crucial next step?

Just fucking open everything back the fuck up.

There is no way you can convince me they are not manufacturing a depression at this point. It is the only reason to ignore reality and keep pushing WuFlu fear so hard that businesses are still under foot.
I'm not even a capitalist, but at this point even I have to look at the survival rate and think this was overblown. I get grandma is really important, but I don't want all the shit that will happen if America implodes. I mean hey world police is now broke, I'm sure that won't cause destabalization. Then you have the ecnonomic issues where America is fucked so trade is fucked, and the thing holding fiat together is fucked so everything is fucked. Atleast we produce like 60% of our own food I guess. Fuck I probably won't have a job to go back to when covid is dealt with.
 
Now is a great time to invest in family and frens. Not conditional or superficial people, people who really care for you and stick by you through thick and thin.

That way even if everything goes to shit, you'll still have some great people in your life
I have a family member who has an M14.

I have a carbon fiber crossbow. And not those pussy sheer metal bolts. The fucking barbed ones, motherfucker.

We're ready for some fucking red dawn shit.
 
America is probably gonna be fine because there's literally shitloads of unowned wilderness to just squat on or technically owned land in the middle of fucking nowhere that nobody will notice your retard shack on

Luckily I live in a place where 99.9% of the population are literal livestock and will instantly die upon inability to purchase funko pops so there's plenty of wilderness for me tooo!

Gonna spend the rest of my life in a yurt in the middle of nowhere with the goats with a solar powered PC shitposting with my hacked phone and playing old video games. Rate my MTV krib.

 
I think it's going to be worse than people are expecting. There's no real jobs appearing, millions of migrants coming, and quite a few businesses have ridiculously low revenue since Biden took office. I know a few who took a 50-60% hit due to the "pandemic" and lockdowns but took an 80% hit in February on their new revenue.
Look on the bright side, the immigrants will stop coming when America is a dirt poor, 3rd world country. Instead they will all head over to mama Merkel and Euro... Oh no. Let's just hope Europe is shitty enough so the middle class are too fucked to be virtue signalling and making shit worse for working class.
 
Look on the bright side, the immigrants will stop coming when America is a dirt poor, 3rd world country. Instead they will all head over to mama Merkel and Euro... Oh no. Let's just hope Europe is shitty enough so the middle class are too fucked to be virtue signalling and making shit worse for working class.
I've often said the quickest way to get the migrants to turn back is turn america into a shit hole.

Imagine Democrats losing their imported voting block cause they cocked shit up.

All the illegals leaving would put a major dent in idpol.
 
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