Treasury Investors Remain Calm Amid Unsettling Inflation Data

 | May 18, 2021 07:36

U.S. Treasuries have traded in a narrow range over the past week despite harrowing inflation data that should give investors pause. Is this the calm before the storm?

There was a considerable hullaballoo over the consumer price index on Wednesday, as the April figure shot ahead 0.8% from March, instead of the 0.2% gain forecast, while the jump over 12 months was 4.2% instead of the 3.6% consensus forecast.

Less noticed was the sharp increase in the producer price index, which registered a 0.6% gain on the month, double the 0.3% expected. For the 12 months, the PPI was up 6.2%, the biggest increase since the government started tracking this data in 2010, and well ahead of the 3.8% that was expected.

Other price data reported last week was a 10.6% increase in import prices on the year—the highest jump in a decade—and a 0.7% increase on the month.

On Monday, the New York Fed reported that the index for prices paid in New York State’s manufacturing industry hit a record high 83.5, a gain of nine points on the month. Prices received also hit a record, rising two points to 37.1. (These price measures are different than the headline index, which measures general business conditions.)