EVENTS:   East Asia: Will consumption ever rise? Will exchange rates ever appreciate? - Paul Cavey/East Asia Econ - 23 Sep 25     ROADSHOWS: Global ESG and Impact-Investment Trends with Contrarian Trades in the Energy Transition Space - François Boutin-Dufresne & Félix-A. Boudreault /Sustainable Market Strategies   •   New York • 20 - 24 Oct London   22 - 24 Sep 25       US Healthcare & Merger Arbitrage Catalysts - Tommy Barletta /Aldis Institutional Services   •   London   22 - 23 Sep 25       East Asia Macro Outlook: China, Taiwan, Japan and South Korea - Paul Cavey /East Asia Econ   •   London   23 - 24 Sep 25       L/S Defense Europe’s Military Spending U.S. Strategy and Geopolitical Risks - Col. Jeffrey McCausland /Hedgeye   •   London   24 - 25 Sep 25       Buyside to Buyside Forum and Expert Calls across TMT, Consumer, Healthcare and Fintech - Andrew Peters /Revelare Partners   •   London   25 - 26 Sep 25      

Market Outlook for '25 - The Great Inflation Comeback

Trahan Macro Research

Thu 06 Feb 2025 - 09:30 GMT / 10:30 CET

Summary

François Trahan’s presentation, The Great Inflation Comeback of 2025, argues that inflation is set to return, even without new tariffs. He critiques the Federal Reserve (Fed) for focusing too much on tariffs while missing broader economic forces, much like it underestimated labor shortages in 2021. Trahan analyzes past Fed tightening cycles, noting that most led to recessions. However, the current cycle is unique due to factors beyond fiscal stimulus. He identifies three key drivers: strong investment in reshoring efforts, consumption fueled by immigration, and the Fed’s failure to raise rates high enough to curb inflation. He highlights how private construction spending, particularly in manufacturing, has surged due to policies like the CHIPS Act. Immigration has also played an underappreciated role in GDP growth. He warns that the Fed’s recent “victory tour” over a soft landing is premature, predicting renewed inflation in 2024. Leading economic indicators, such as the ISM New Orders Index, suggest economic momentum is building. Rising earnings and tighter labor markets will likely reignite inflation, with wage pressures increasing. Trahan also discusses tariffs and potential deportation policies, which could worsen labor shortages and drive inflation higher. Globally, central bank rate cuts and rising commodity prices could further fuel inflation. He predicts the Fed will tighten policy again in 2024, pushing bond yields higher and restraining a housing recovery. For investors, Trahan recommends cyclical stocks, small caps, and companies with strong pricing power, while cautioning against rate-sensitive sectors like REITs and tech. He sees 2024 as a year dominated by inflationary forces and market volatility.

Topics

Stronger Economic Prospects: An opportunity for small caps and cyclicals

Recovery in Inflation: Favors companies with pricing power

Fed Tightening / Higher Interest Rates: A problem for growth stocks and early cyclical sectors.