Hot CPI print – Wall Street inflation fears mount as break-even rates hit multiyear highs

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Wall Street inflation anxiety deepened after Tuesday's hot CPI print, with five-year break-even rates at their highest since October 2022 and the 10-year measure at 2.5%, its peak since 2023.

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Summary:

  • The five-year break-even inflation rate, derived from the gap between standard Treasury and inflation-protected securities yields, recently hit its highest level since October 2022, suggesting markets expect average annual inflation of around 2.7% over the next five years
  • The 10-year break-even rate climbed to 2.5% this month, its highest reading since 2023, driven largely by the oil price surge stemming from the Iran conflict
  • Tuesday's CPI release weighed on equities, with the Nasdaq composite falling less than 1%, led lower by chip and memory stocks, while the S&P 500 closed down less than half a percent, and the 10-year Treasury yield settled at 4.462%, its highest closing level since last July
  • Oil prices rose a further 4.2% on Tuesday to trade around $102 a barrel, extending a year-to-date gain of approximately 78%
  • Analysts cautioned that rising inflation expectations could pressure the Fed toward rate increases, creating a more difficult environment for risk assets, though some noted break-even rates have not yet reached levels likely to alarm policymakers

Wall Street's inflation anxiety intensified sharply on Tuesday after a hotter-than-expected consumer price reading pushed key measures of long-term inflation expectations to their highest levels in years, rattling technology stocks and renewing debate over whether the Federal Reserve will need to raise interest rates.

Inflation expectations had been climbing even before Tuesday's CPI release, but the data accelerated the move. The five-year break-even rate, derived from the yield gap between conventional US Treasuries and inflation-protected securities, reached its highest point since October 2022, with markets now pricing average annual inflation of around 2.7% over the next five years. The 10-year break-even rate hit 2.5% this month, a level not seen since 2023. Both measures have been pushed higher primarily by the surge in oil prices stemming from the US-Iran conflict, with crude trading up roughly 78% since the start of the year.

The equity market reaction was swift. Technology stocks led declines, with the Nasdaq composite falling as chip and memory companies, among the strongest performers in recent months, came under particular pressure. The S&P 500 closed lower. In fixed income, Treasury yields climbed, with the 10-year note settling at 4.462%, its highest closing level since last July, reflecting the same repricing of inflation and rate expectations hitting equities from a different angle. The Dow Jones Industrial Average managed a marginal gain after recovering from early losses.

Analysts said the significance of the break-even rate moves extends beyond their headline levels. Though front-month crude futures peaked in early April, inflation expectations have continued rising into May, suggesting markets are not simply tracking the spot oil price but are increasingly concerned about how sustained energy costs will feed through into broader goods and services inflation over time. That distinction matters for the Fed, which has historically been willing to look through oil-driven price spikes on the assumption that the effect is temporary and contained.

The concern now, analysts said, is that the current energy shock is landing on top of inflation that has already been running above the Fed's 2% target for more than five years, and that repeated shocks may be conditioning businesses and consumers to expect persistently higher prices. Elevated expectations carry their own inflationary momentum: when businesses anticipate rising costs, they tend to set prices accordingly, and when borrowers perceive inflation-adjusted interest rates as low, they are more inclined to spend. Both dynamics can entrench the very inflation that initially drove expectations higher.

Some analysts offered a more measured view. There was a degree of reassurance in parts of the April CPI report, including a smaller-than-expected increase in airfares, which provided limited evidence that energy inflation was comprehensively bleeding into services costs. Some analysts suggested break-even rates would need to reach 2.6% before warranting significant alarm from policymakers, and noted the Fed's response would also depend on whether the rise was clearly energy-driven rather than broad-based.

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The 10-year break-even rate touching 2.5%, its highest since 2023, and the five-year rate reaching levels last seen in October 2022 represent a meaningful shift in the inflation expectations backdrop that has underpinned equity market resilience in recent years. Oil at around $102 a barrel, up roughly 78% year-to-date, is the primary driver, but analysts note that break-even rates have continued climbing even after crude futures peaked in early April, suggesting markets are pricing in a more durable inflationary impulse rather than a purely oil-linked spike. Treasury yields rising to their highest closing level since July, with the 10-year settling above 4.46%, reflects the same concern from the fixed income side. The pressure point for equities arrives if inflation expectations force the Fed toward rate increases, reversing the conditions that have supported stocks through the current cycle.

This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.

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