Last year the market rebounded from what was a challenging 2022. Investor sentiment going into 2023 was decidedly negative, as the Federal Reserve’s aggressive rate hiking campaign to quell inflation led market participants to broadly anticipate a recession that still has not arrived. Instead, the economy proved more resilient than many expected while the Federal Reserve’s campaign against inflation showed progress. Falling inflation coupled with the anticipation of easier Fed policy has raised investors’ spirits heading into 2024. The possibility of inflation returning to more normal levels while the economy remains healthy has increased hopes for a “soft landing,” something that historically has been difficult to achieve.
Recent data on inflation has been encouraging, trending toward the Federal Reserve’s customary 2% target. The consumer price index for December showed headline inflation increased 3.4% on an annual basis, an acceleration from 3.1% growth the prior month. That is the wrong direction, but in more encouraging news, the core consumer price index, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, fell to a 3.9% annual increase in December, a modest tick lower from 4.0% growth in November. The Fed’s preferred inflation measure, the core PCE price index, rose 3.2% in November versus the prior year, down from 3.4% in October. Notably, the November PCE inflation data took the core six-month annualized rate of inflation down to 1.9%.
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