No Result
View All Result
  • Login
Tuesday, December 16, 2025
FeeOnlyNews.com
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading
No Result
View All Result
FeeOnlyNews.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Investing

Tariffs, Inflation, and Returns: How Investments Respond to Supply Shocks

by FeeOnlyNews.com
7 months ago
in Investing
Reading Time: 6 mins read
A A
0
Tariffs, Inflation, and Returns: How Investments Respond to Supply Shocks
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LInkedIn


Tariffs have reclaimed the economic spotlight. But with their timing and magnitude uncertain, investors are on edge. A fascinating history of tariffs and their effects on investment returns is provided by Baltussen et al in a recent Enterprising Investor blog. This blog takes a complementary approach to exploring their possible implications for returns.

Tariffs change relative prices. Just as large changes in oil prices pushes up energy costs compared to other goods, tariffs make imports relatively more expensive. In economics’ parlance, tariffs are “supply shocks.” And because price adjustment is costly to firms in the short run, import prices rise in response to large tariffs while other prices don’t immediately change despite possibly softening demand (see Romer 2019 for the modern macro explanation of “nominal rigidities”). This causes the average price level to rise. That is, tariffs cause the headline (all items) inflation rate to go up.

This post offers a framework for thinking about the effect of tariffs on major asset class returns by estimating asset classes’ response to supply shocks. By separating inflation’s “signal,” or trend component (determined by fundamental forces) from its shock-driven “noise” component, we can estimate the past response of major asset classes to the latter. This may suggest lessons about their possible response of asset classes to one-time tariffs.

Quantifying Inflation Shocks Using Core and Median CPI

Economic theory and a little analysis allow us to guess at how asset classes might respond to the inflation-shock effect of tariffs.

As for theory, modern macroeconomics describes inflation using a “Phillips curve” framework, named after the economist who first noted that economic slack and inflation were negatively related (Phillips used unemployment and wages). Phillips curves can be specified in various ways. Generally, they explain inflation with three variables: inflation expectations (consumer, business, or professional forecaster), an output gap (for example, the unemployment rate or the vacancy-to-unemployment ratio), and a shock term.

This blog uses a Phillips curve approach to separate inflation’s signal or trend, driven by inflation expectations and the output gap, from noise or the fleeting factors that come and go.

This sidesteps two issues: that tariff shocks pass through to trend inflation by raising inflation expectations and costs of production as well as other channels. There is in fact already evidence that consumer inflation expectations are rising. Incorporating these effects would make this analysis considerably more complicated, however, and so they are ignored for now.

The Phillips Curve tells us that we can decompose inflation into trend and shock components. Typically, this is done by subtracting the trend in inflation from headline (all items) inflation. This blog instead uses the median consumer price index (CPI) inflation rate as calculated by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland as its proxy for trend inflation because of median CPI’s attractive properties.[1]

And instead of using headline CPI inflation as its starting point, it uses core CPI inflation, which excludes food and energy (XFE CPI). XFE CPI is preferred because the difference between XFE and median CPI yields a measure of shocks purged of large changes in the relative price of food and energy. This measure is referred to as “non-XFE shocks.”

The charts in the panels of Exhibit 1 give a sense of the frequency and size of non-XFE shocks. The scatterplot shows monthly XFE versus median inflation. When they’re equal, points lie on the 45-degree line. Pairs above the 45-degree line are positive non-XFE shocks and vice versa. (The R-code used to produce charts and perform analysis presented in this blog can be found on an R-Pubs page). The histogram shows the distribution of these shocks. Large disturbances are rare.

Exhibit 1. Top panel shows median vs. XFE CPI from 1983 to 2025:3. Bottom panel shows the distribution of the shocks (the distance from the 45-degree line in the top panel); frequencies for each of the 11 “bins” appear on the bars.

Source: FRED

Asset-Class Sensitivity to Inflation Surprises

Having defined non-XFE shocks, we can estimate how major asset classes have responded to them. This may provide a preview of how these asset classes might react to inflation shocks resulting from tariffs.

Relationships are estimated in the customary way: by regressing asset-class returns on non-XFE shocks. The resulting estimated coefficient is the left-hand-side variable’s non-XFE shock “beta.” This approach is conventional, and mirrors that taken in my Enterprising Investor blog Did Real Assets Provide an Inflation Hedge When Investors Needed it Most?

Regressions use monthly percentage changes for non-XFE shocks as the right-hand side variable, monthly returns for the S&P 500 total return (S&P 500) index, Northern Trust Real Asset Allocation total return (real assets) index, Bloomberg Commodities Total Return (BCI) index, Bloomberg TIPS index, and 1–3-month Treasury bill return (T-bills) index as dependent variables. Inflation data comes from FRED and index returns from YCharts. Because sample size varies by asset class regressions are run over the longest available sample period for each asset class, which ends in March 2025 in each case.

subscribe

One caveat before discussing results. Non-XFE shocks could be due to any large relative price change, except of course changes in food and energy. That is, supply shocks include more than supply-chain shocks.

Unfortunately, there’s no obvious way to isolate the disturbances we’re most interested in using public inflation data. But since we can’t know exactly what form such tariff-induced inflation disturbances will take, an examination of asset class response to non-XFE shocks is a reasonable place to start. With that said, results are shown in Exhibit 2.

Exhibit 2. Regression results.

Dep. variableTIPSBCIT-billsS&P 500Real assets Begin date1998:52001:91997:61989:102015:12 Non-XFE shock “beta”0.5454.440*-0.248***2.6281.365 95% CI(-1.191, 2.280)(-0.585, 9.465)(-0.432, -0.064)(-1.449, 6.704)(-4.015, 6.745) Observations323283334426112 R20.0010.0110.0210.0040.002 Notes: *p<0.1; **p<0.05; ***p<0.01; standard errors are adjusted as indicated by residual behavior. Sources: FRED, YCharts, Author’s regressions.

A positive, significant estimate for the “non_xfe_shock” coefficient suggests that an asset class hedges against non-XFE shocks. A positive-but-not-significant coefficient estimate suggests that it might hedge non-XFE shocks, but that the sample size doesn’t allow us to reject the claim that it doesn’t with confidence. Confidence intervals give a sense for the size of the effect of inflation on returns, and of course for the reliability of estimates.

These findings suggest that commodities (BCI) responded positively to shocks, and T-bills negatively, though the former relationship is estimated less accurately than the latter (i.e., T-bills confidence interval is tighter). Of the remaining asset classes, TIPS, stocks, and real assets enter with the right signs for a shock-hedge (positive) but are too imprecisely estimated to support the claim even weakly. These conclusions are robust to estimation over the common sample period (2015:12– 2025:3).

Bracing for the Tariff-Price Shock

This short exercise suggests that commodities “hedged” shocks to inflation stemming from large relative price changes (other-than food and energy), on average. T-bills did not. (The shock-T-bill relationship could be explained by the fear that a price-level jump may provoke a monetary-policy tightening response and thus higher short-term interest rates.) The reaction of other asset classes considered here — stocks, real assets, and TIPS — is ambiguous.

If the empirical relationships estimated here are stable and if tariffs affect inflation like a non-XFE shock, the approach followed here might help inform directional estimates of how tariffs could affect investment returns.

[1] Outlier-exclusion measures like the median are more efficient measures of the population mean – the trend, in our case – in the presence of “fat tails,” such as those exhibited by the distribution of monthly price changes, than the sample mean. Additionally median and other trimmed-mean inflation measures are both better forecasters of future inflation and are less correlated with future money supply increases (suggesting that they filter out the “supply shocks” that central banks typically react to) than traditional “core” (ex. food and energy) inflation.



Source link

Tags: inflationInvestmentsrespondReturnsshocksSupplytariffs
ShareTweetShare
Previous Post

What 150 independent advisors wanted from their tech stack

Next Post

Iran says may allow US inspectors from nuclear watchdog if deal reached

Related Posts

The 10 Best Performing Dividend Aristocrats In The Past 10 Years

The 10 Best Performing Dividend Aristocrats In The Past 10 Years

by FeeOnlyNews.com
December 15, 2025
0

Published on December 15th, 2025 by Bob Ciura The goal of rational investors is to maximize total return under a...

8 Rentals on a Teacher’s Salary by “Reverse BRRRR-ing”

8 Rentals on a Teacher’s Salary by “Reverse BRRRR-ing”

by FeeOnlyNews.com
December 15, 2025
0

Within three years, this high school teacher bought eight rental units, giving him an extra $1,600/month in pure cash flow...

Are You Accidentally Overpaying Taxes Because Your Life is Too Complicated?

Are You Accidentally Overpaying Taxes Because Your Life is Too Complicated?

by FeeOnlyNews.com
December 12, 2025
0

In This Article This article is presented by Range. If you’re a high earner juggling rentals, RSUs, a W-2, maybe...

Winners and Losers in a World Without Quarterly Earnings

Winners and Losers in a World Without Quarterly Earnings

by FeeOnlyNews.com
December 12, 2025
0

The question of whether quarterly earnings reporting helps or harms long-term value creation has returned to the US policy agenda....

How to Calculate Cash Flow on a Rental Property

How to Calculate Cash Flow on a Rental Property

by FeeOnlyNews.com
December 12, 2025
0

Before you buy your first (or next) real estate deal, you need to know one thing—how to calculate cash flow...

Migration Trends Are Ramping Up Again—Here’s Where Movers Are Going

Migration Trends Are Ramping Up Again—Here’s Where Movers Are Going

by FeeOnlyNews.com
December 10, 2025
0

In This Article For the last few years, the narrative about the U.S. real estate market has been that homeowners...

Next Post
Iran says may allow US inspectors from nuclear watchdog if deal reached

Iran says may allow US inspectors from nuclear watchdog if deal reached

Whoopi Goldberg, Halle Berry and other stars on how Hollywood treats Black women

Whoopi Goldberg, Halle Berry and other stars on how Hollywood treats Black women

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Newsom, DeSantis join forces to blast ‘idiotic’ push to allow oil drilling off coasts of California, Florida

Newsom, DeSantis join forces to blast ‘idiotic’ push to allow oil drilling off coasts of California, Florida

November 23, 2025
Israeli housing rental platform Venn raises m

Israeli housing rental platform Venn raises $52m

November 18, 2025
What is a credit card spending limit — and what to know

What is a credit card spending limit — and what to know

August 4, 2025
Links 12/10/2025 | naked capitalism

Links 12/10/2025 | naked capitalism

December 10, 2025
5 Senior Discounts Being Eliminated by National Retailers

5 Senior Discounts Being Eliminated by National Retailers

December 7, 2025
AT&T promised the government it won’t pursue DEI

AT&T promised the government it won’t pursue DEI

December 4, 2025
8 spending habits that instantly give away your social class without you realizing it

8 spending habits that instantly give away your social class without you realizing it

0
Unwrap The Gift Of Business Intelligence At The Edge With Observability Insights

Unwrap The Gift Of Business Intelligence At The Edge With Observability Insights

0
Is it Right for Your Trading Strategy?

Is it Right for Your Trading Strategy?

0
2025 was a breakout year for Indian real estate; 2026 looks even stronger: Aman Sarin of Anant Raj

2025 was a breakout year for Indian real estate; 2026 looks even stronger: Aman Sarin of Anant Raj

0
It Should Take a Long Time to Build a Foundation

It Should Take a Long Time to Build a Foundation

0
UK To Monitor Citizens’ Emotions Through CCTV Footage

UK To Monitor Citizens’ Emotions Through CCTV Footage

0
8 spending habits that instantly give away your social class without you realizing it

8 spending habits that instantly give away your social class without you realizing it

December 16, 2025
Is it Right for Your Trading Strategy?

Is it Right for Your Trading Strategy?

December 15, 2025
2025 was a breakout year for Indian real estate; 2026 looks even stronger: Aman Sarin of Anant Raj

2025 was a breakout year for Indian real estate; 2026 looks even stronger: Aman Sarin of Anant Raj

December 15, 2025
Trump open to reviewing pardon for Samourai Bitcoin app developer

Trump open to reviewing pardon for Samourai Bitcoin app developer

December 15, 2025
India’s primary market braces for surge of hospital and IVF IPOs next year

India’s primary market braces for surge of hospital and IVF IPOs next year

December 15, 2025
New York City is officially getting 3 Las Vegas-style casinos

New York City is officially getting 3 Las Vegas-style casinos

December 15, 2025
FeeOnlyNews.com

Get the latest news and follow the coverage of Business & Financial News, Stock Market Updates, Analysis, and more from the trusted sources.

CATEGORIES

  • Business
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Economy
  • Financial Planning
  • Investing
  • Market Analysis
  • Markets
  • Money
  • Personal Finance
  • Startups
  • Stock Market
  • Trading

LATEST UPDATES

  • 8 spending habits that instantly give away your social class without you realizing it
  • Is it Right for Your Trading Strategy?
  • 2025 was a breakout year for Indian real estate; 2026 looks even stronger: Aman Sarin of Anant Raj
  • Our Great Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use, Legal Notices & Disclaimers
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2022-2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.

Welcome Back!

Sign In with Facebook
Sign In with Google
Sign In with Linked In
OR

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading

Copyright © 2022-2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.