US April CPI to be released tonight at 20:30: Alarm bells ringing for 'second-round effects' on inflation, will it become harder for the Fed to cut interest rates?
The market is concerned about whether the energy shock is beginning to spread comprehensively to rents, food, transportation, and core consumption. Wall Street has warned that a new round of systemic inflation may be taking shape.
The Fed's new chief faces a dilemma: cutting interest rates could lead to soaring inflation, while not cutting risks facing a lawsuit from Trump.
Kevin Warsh, the new Federal Reserve chair, is about to be confirmed this week but already finds himself in a dire predicament: the Iran war has driven inflation up to 3.5%, and the FOMC saw the highest number of dissenting votes in three decades. Meanwhile, Trump is not only publicly pressuring for interest rate cuts but also threatening legal action. Cutting rates risks runaway inflation, while refraining from doing so sharply escalates political risks—this crisis of central bank independence could reshape the global monetary policy landscape.
Survivors of the Internet bubble: Today's AI resembles 1997 more than 1999.
Dan Niles, a well-known chip analyst during the internet bubble era, believes that the valuation of chip stocks appears somewhat high in the short term but is not significantly overvalued from a long-term perspective. "Intel has only recently returned to its 2000 level last year, and relative to its potential profitability, it remains undervalued."
The specter of stagflation returns: Which parts of the 1970s asset playbook still hold true today?
Fifty-three years ago, Federal Reserve Chairman Burns characterized the oil price shock as an "exogenous variable," after which inflation spiraled out of control for seven years. Today, the new chairman, Warsh, has almost replicated the same logic — CPI has risen to 3.7%, the Strait of Hormuz remains blockaded, and history seems to be knocking at the door. However, three structural differences determine that this is not a complete replay of the 1970s but rather a more sophisticated game of asset differentiation.
US CPI to be released at 8:30 PM tonight! With impacts from crude oil, AI chips, and rental costs, the data is expected to show a significant increase.
The US CPI for April is expected to maintain its strong momentum, with the overall CPI projected to rise to 3.7% year-on-year and core CPI reaching 2.7% year-on-year, potentially marking the largest increase since September 2023. Although the market attributes high inflation primarily to external shocks and technical adjustments, and has not repriced the risk of interest rate hikes, the prospect of a Federal Reserve rate cut has become increasingly unlikely.
As the 'Big Short' predicts a market crash, a well-known investor presents an 'AI bull market timeline,' suggesting the bubble can continue to expand for another year.
The founder and portfolio manager of Niles Investment Management stated that there may still be room for the market bubble to expand.