This week in Bidenomics: Thanks for nothing, man
Donald Trump should be elated.
The incoming president will inherit a full-employment economy, with consumers buoyed by solid real-income growth and confidence about job security. To underscore that, employers added a robust 265,000 new jobs in December, far outpacing economists’ expectations.
Yet bad vibes abound. Stocks, instead of rising on the upbeat job news, slumped because of fears the economy may suddenly be a little too hot.
Last September, moderating job growth and falling inflation allowed the Federal Reserve to start cutting interest rates after an aggressive hiking cycle. Short-term rates are now down by a full percentage point. Investors expected the Fed to continue gradually cutting rates for at least another year or so, as a modest form of monetary stimulus assuring the economy didn’t cool itself right into a recession.
But blowout job growth at the end of 2024 has abruptly shifted that calculus. “Given a resilient labor market, we now think the Fed cutting cycle is over,” Bank of America explained in a Jan. 10 research note. “Economic activity is robust. We see little reason for additional easing. The conversation should move to hikes.”
There’s more to worry about.
Consumers suddenly expect inflation to worsen — and that seems to rest with Trump. “Consumers’ inflation worries soared this month,” Oxford Economics reported on Jan. 10, citing the latest University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey. That data shows that respondents expect the inflation rate one year from now to be 3.3%, the highest expected level in eight months. That’s also considerably higher than the current 2.7% inflation rate.
That may be because consumers are starting to hear a lot about the tariffs Trump plans to impose on imported products — and they’re worried. One key tell in the Michigan survey is a surge in the portion of respondents expecting appliances and other durable goods to get more expensive in the future.
Consumers “are becoming increasingly worried about future prices, likely due to the uncertainty regarding tariffs,” Oxford concluded.
Consumer psyches vacillate, and they can improve as quickly as they sour. It’s possible Trump could do something once he takes office on Jan. 20 to assure Americans he won’t do things that raise prices.
But markets are pricing in the same worries as consumers — and that is costing people money today. Wall Street is buzzing with theories about why the rate on 10-year Treasury bonds has risen by more than a point since September, during the same period when the Fed lowered short-term rates by a point. Long and short-term rates don’t always move in unison, but it’s very unusual for them to move sharply in opposite directions, as they have recently.
One explanation could be the same concern about Trump-flation that consumers are expressing.
Inflation has fallen sharply from the 2022 peak of 9%, but new tariffs would raise the cost of imports, which is de facto inflation. And if inflation reignites, market expectations must change. The Fed would have to end an easing cycle that has barely gotten underway, portending higher borrowing costs and lower profits for businesses. That tends to depress stock values. Higher future inflation would also erode the value of money, compelling investors to demand higher interest rates in order to purchase longer-term debt.
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Another concern is the exploding national debt, now more than $36 trillion and growing indefinitely. There will come a point at which the US Treasury is flooding the market with so much debt that investors can’t absorb it all, or don’t want to. That would force rates higher to compensate investors for what they believe to be higher risks of holding long-term debt.
That could be starting to happen now.
Whatever the cause, most consumer and business loans move in lockstep with the 10-year Treasury, which has jumped from a low of 3.6% in September to 4.7% now. The average 30-year mortgage rate during that time has jumped from 6.1% to 6.9%. Consumers have been expecting lower borrowing costs, but those are not materializing.
It’s obviously speculative and arguably unfair to blame Trump for consumer and investor anxieties before he has even taken office. But markets are sending Trump a message he ought to heed: Take the Biden economy, and improve on it. What nobody needs is more of the higher inflation and rising interest rates that soured voters on Biden in the first place.
Rick Newman is a senior columnist for Yahoo Finance. Follow him on Bluesky and X: @rickjnewman.
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