Rieder pointed to sticky inflation across service sectors, like auto and health insurance, as evidence. “They’re unresponsive to interest rates and people are spending — older people, middle- to high-income are spending — and are keeping that service-level inflation at high levels.”
“The price of a pair of tennis shoes is what it was 20 years ago. If you go to a tennis match, it’s double what it used to be,” he added.
Bond markets rallied Wednesday after a report showed that headline growth in consumer prices eased in April, with swaps traders ramping up bets that the Fed will ease by as many as two quarter-point cuts come December. But inflation data has also showed that for some areas of the service economy — from shelter costs to auto insurance and medical care — price growth is proving harder to tame.
Still, “the worst fears were allayed” with the release of the April CPI data, Rieder said. “As long as you’re price stable, employing a lot of people, growing the size of the workforce, and moderating a little bit on the growth side, it’s pretty good.”
With assistance from David Westin.