What bond-market guru Mohammed El-Erian said Friday was enough to make bond investors listen like they’re in an old E.F. Hutton commercial.
“Inflation is not going to be transitory,” the chief economic adviser at Allianz SE said in an interview on Bloomberg TV.
El-Erian likened it to his belief in 1999 that Argentina would default, which came true two years later; his conviction that Brazil wouldn’t default, which proved true; and his call that the economy was in a ‘New Normal’ of slower growth coming out of the financial crisis more than a decade ago.
Inflation as measured by consumer prices increased an unexpectedly large 5.4% in the year through June as the economy’s ongoing recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic gained traction.
Chairman Jerome Powell, author of the now-famous “transitory” tag on current inflation, and his colleagues at the Federal Reserve are missing what is happening with companies and their pricing power, said El-Erian, who also is chair of Gramercy Funds Management.
“I have a whole list of companies that have announced price increases, that have told us they expect further price increases, and that they expect them to stick,” El-Erian said.
He explains the current 10-year Treasury yield is below 1.3% because the Fed is injecting liquidity into the market with monthly purchases of $120 billion in securities.
“The Fed should ease its foot slowly off the accelerator,” he said.