The Economist March 19th 2022 Finance&economics 67
existencewiththevirus.ChinaMeheco,a
stateownedfirm,signeda dealtosupply
Pfizer’sPaxlovidpill,whichhelpsprotect
infectedpeople against serious disease.
Butthelatestoutbreakhasbeenmetwith
morehawkishrhetoric.Ona visittoJilin
onMarch13th SunChunlan, oneofthe
country’s four deputy prime ministers,
saidChina’sprovincesshouldfollowtheir
zerocovidstrategywithoutcompromise.
Thatrelentlessnessmay,however,re
quirecompromiseonothergoals.Morgan
Stanley,a bank,hascutitsforecastforChi
na’seconomicgrowththisyearfrom5.3%
to5.1%.It thinksgdpmaynotgrowatallin
thefirstquarter,comparedwiththeprevi
ousthreemonths.Theeconomymayyet
reboundlaterintheyear.ButifChinaisto
comeclosetoitsgrowthtarget,itwillfirst
havetoclamberoutofitsditch.n
Consumerprices
A Russian
phenomenon
L
ast summer, amid mounting alarm
about inflation in America, economic
advisers in the White House penned a blog
post in which they examined historical
parallels. Although the press was full of
comparisons with oil shocks in the 1970s,
they wrote that a nearer relative was the
dislocation after the second world war,
when supply shortages interacted with
pentup demand. It was a wellreasoned
argument. But the surge in commodity
prices over the past month, in the wake of
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, gives rise to
an unsettling question: is the global econ
omy now seeing a 1970sstyle price shock
on top of a late1940sstyle supply crunch?
To be sure, no serious economist ex
pects inflation in the rich world to reach
the giddy doubledigit heights of those epi
sodes. On March 16th the Federal Reserve
raised interest rates for the first time since
2018, kicking off a tightening cycle that it
expects to continue well into next year.
Moreover, the retreat in oil markets in re
cent days could offer relief.
Nevertheless, surging prices for every
thing from wheat to nickel threaten to add
to inflation. And rolling lockdowns in
parts of Chinacould exacerbate strains on
global supply chains. Consumerprice in
flation in America already stood at a 40
year high in February, at 7.9% year on year;
the rate in the euro area, meanwhile, ex
ceeded 5%.
Investors are still far from persuaded
that central bankers are on top of the pro
blem.Themoststrikingevidenceisthein
flationexpectationsthatcanbefoundin
fixedincomemarketsinAmerica.ice, a fi
nancialfirm,distilsa fewdifferentnum
bers,includingyieldsoninflationprotect
ed bonds and interestrate swaps, into
shorttermandlongtermindicesforgaug
ingexpectations.InlateJanuarytheex
pectedrateofinflationoverthenextyear
was3.5%.OnMarch15thitstoodat5.4%.
Expectationsintheeuroareahaveseen
similar,if slightlysteeper,trends.Theone
yearinflationswap rateroseto5.9%on
March8th(seechart).
Marketsareinherentlyvolatile,sode
riving inflation predictions from bond
yieldsshouldbetakenwitha pinchofsalt.
Buttheshiftinpricesisbroadlyinline
withwhateconomistsareforecasting.Last
weekBankofAmericaraiseditsinflation
forecastsformuchoftheworld.InAmeri
caitnowexpectsinflationover 2022 asa
wholetoaverage7%,upfromitspriorfore
castof6.3%.Intheeurozoneitseesan
evenbiggerincrease,withinflationaverag
ing6%thisyear,wellaboveitsprevious
forecastof4.4%.Thechallengeisgreater
forEuropebecauseofitshighdependency
onRussia,whichsuppliesabout45%ofits
gasimports.
Inanindicationofjusthowpervasive
thepressuresarelikelytobe,economists
areevenratchetinguptheirinflationfore
castsforJapan,wheredeflationhaslong
beenthebiggerthreat.OnMarch8ths&p, a
ratingagency,saidthatJapaneseinflation
would average2% this year, more than
doubleitspreviousprediction.Sofarfore
castersexpecta relativelymodestincrease
inoverallinflationinemergingmarkets.
Butrisingfoodcostswillbeespeciallyda
magingfortheirpoorestcitizens.
Two related questions emerge from
theseforecasts.Thefirstiswhethertherise
in commodity prices today will feed
throughintoloftyinflationinthelonger
run.Thereis,infact,reasonforcautious
optimism.Alargebodyofresearchshows
thatthepassthroughfromhigheroilpric
esintononenergyinflationisquitelimit
ed.Forinstance,GoldmanSachs,a bank,
calculatesthata 10%increaseincrudeoil
prices leads to a jump ofnearly three
tenthsofa percentagepointinheadlinein
flationinAmerica,buttoanincreaseof
justaboutthreehundredthsofa percent
agepointincoreinflation(strippingout
foodandenergyprices).Thathelpsexplain
whymarketexpectationsoflongerterm
pricetrendsremainmoresubdued:pricing
forinflationfiveyearsfromnowiscloseto
theFed’sgoalofkeepinginflationtoanav
erageof2%.
Thefollowupiswhatcentralbankers
choosetodoaboutrisingcommoditypric
es.Thereceivedwisdomofthepastfewde
cadesisthatpolicymakersshouldavoid
overtighteninginthefaceofoilshocks.
Indeed,surgingenergypricescanactasa
dragonconsumption,whichisa particular
concernforEurope.
Butwithrealinterestratesdeeplynega
tiveinbothAmericaandEurope,central
banksstillhavea longwaytogotoreinin
inflation,whateverhappenstocommodity
prices.OnMarch10ththeEuropeanCen
tralBanksurprisedmarketsbyannounc
ingthatitwouldwinddownitsbondbuy
ingmore quickly. And accordingto the
Fed’sprojections,itsquarterpointratein
creaseislikelytobethefirstofseventhis
year. Centralbanksare,fornow,stickingto
theirprewarplans.n
WASHINGTON, DC
The inflationary consequences of war
will spread
Shock and war
Inflation expectations, one-year swap rate
2022, %
Source:Bloomberg *Retail price inflation
10
8
6
4
2
0
February March
Japan
Britain*
UnitedStates
Euroarea
Russia invades Ukraine
Thecommoditiescrunch
When China met
the free market
T
he tradingof commodities is an ar
cane activity that makes it into the pub
lic eye only at times of extreme hubris.
That is when names like the Hunt brothers,
who tried to corner the silver market in
1980, and Hamanaka Yasuo, or “Mr Cop
per”, who in 1996 produced huge losses for
Sumitomo, a Japanese trading house, be
came household ones. Xiang Guangda, a
Chinese tycoon known as “Big Shot”, vault
ed into the news this month by taking a po
sition on nickel that went badly wrong.
The result has been one of the biggest
tremors in the 145year history of the Lon
don Metal Exchange (lme). It has also
brought China, which is keen to exert more
power over the trading of commodities,
face to face with free markets gone mad.
In the cloistered world of the lme, some
facts about the affair are clear. One is that
nickel prices, already hot before Russia’s
invasion of Ukraine, surged after the West
imposed sanctions on Russia. Another is
A nickel-trading fiasco leaves three big
unanswered questions