Fed has to be ‘far more aggressive…than the Street thinks,’ says academic who called Dow 20,000: ‘This is too much money chasing too few goods’
Jeremy Siegel, professor of finance at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business, on Wednesday sounded sanguine about the equity market, even as he conceded that inflation is likely to be more pernicious than Wall Street expectations, causing the Federal Reserve headaches.
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“Everything is pointing upward. everything is going up…and the Fed,” Siegel said in an interview with CNBC Wednesday afternoon. He speculated that the surge in inflation may cause the Fed to be “far more aggressive than what the Street thinks.”
Rex Nutting: Why interest rates aren’t really the right tool to control inflation
The professor’s comments come as Wednesday’s important inflation data showed consumer price gains pushing the headline year-over-year rate to 7%, a nearly 40-year high.
The academic said that in his estimate the problem with inflation was, perhaps, more pernicious than just a supply-chain bottleneck issue exacerbated by the COVID pandemic but one rooted in demand and easy money.
“This is a demand problem,” the professor said. “This is too much money chasing too few goods,” he said.
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Still, Siegel’s remarks imply that further rate increases might be needed to beat back inflation.
He isn’t alone in that thinking either.
JPMorgan Chase & Co. JPM CEO Jamie Dimon, during a CNBC interview on Monday afternoon, said market projections for as many as three rate increases would be “very easy” for the economy (and market) to absorb. But he said he expects that the central bank might aim to do more.
Meanwhile, Siegel said that so-called TINA, or there is no alternative (to stocks). trading will help buttress the equity markets as bonds get hit.
“Stocks are real assets, you just can’t hold paper assets which are bonds,” Siegel said. The 10-year Treasury note yields 1.73% on Wednesday, hovering around its highest levels since March of 2021.
On Wednesday, however, equities were struggling for direction, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA,
“Higher real rates does mean the rotation happens throughout,” the Wharton professor said, referring to value-oriented trades, compared against growth stocks, which have been winners over the past several years.