
- Moving the markets
US core consumer price inflation reared its ugly head as a 0.2% expected rise in the CPI index turned out to be wishful thinking with the real number showing a surge of 0.8% MoM, which represents an explosion of 4.2% YoY. As ZeroHedge pointed out, this is the biggest YoY jump since September of 2008 and the biggest MoM jump since June 2008:
Core CPI was expected to rise by the most this millennia, but it was hotter than that. The index for all items less food and energy rose 3.0% over the past 12 months; this was its largest 12-month increase since January 1996… and the MoM jump of 0.92% is the biggest since 1981.
As a reminder though, there is nothing to see here, Fed is focused on jobs, not inflation which is “transitory”… forget about your crumbling cost of living… as real wages crash…
Consequently, the equity markets got thrashed, with the tech sector and Small Caps taking the brunt of the beating. And, as was to be expected, bond yields spiked with the 10-year slashing through the 1.65% level and touching its recent high from April 29.
The US Dollar pumped and dumped and then surged higher. The combination of higher yields and a rebounding Dollar took the starch out of Gold’s early upswing, and the precious metal succumbed to the bears as well.
Just like yesterday, there was no place to hide, and it remains to be seen if the dip buyers, who were conspicuously absent today, will make their presence known tomorrow.
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