Tight labor markets, more than any other issue, will compel central banks to keep raising rates. We’re not as confident that wage inflation will fall as we are about declines in other parts of the basket, but monetary policy works with a long lag time. The first hikes of this cycle were only nine months ago, and we don’t think their full impact has been felt yet. So, we don’t think it makes sense to give up on the idea of softer wages, and therefore softer services inflation, going forward.
Interest-Rate Cuts Unlikely Anytime Soon
Still, the wait will be uncomfortable. Until labor weakens, the transition we expect in 2023 can’t really get under way—central bankers will likely stay hawkish. Once labor softness becomes evident, financial markets will likely shift more focus toward economic growth. Good news isn’t likely on that front: we forecast recessions in both the euro area and UK, and near-zero growth in the US for 2023.
Normally, that sort of weak growth would trigger aggressive monetary policy easing, but that won’t be in the cards for 2023. Inflation will probably cool gradually and in halting fashion, with a full convergence to inflation targets unlikely. That’s why we think central banks will pivot more slowly than financial markets seem to expect. The result: by midyear, growth should be slow or negative but policy rates still high and stable. If rate cuts happen, it won’t be until the end of this year or even into 2024 or beyond.
Asia Is Doing Its Own Thing—in Both Directions
While major Western economies are more or less on the same track—even if at different speeds—major Asian economies are on a different journey.
In Japan, inflation is just now starting to rise fast enough to catch the attention of the Bank of Japan (BOJ). The policy rate is still negative, and yield-curve control remains in effect. We expect both to change in 2023, so the BOJ will be moving toward tighter policy even as the Fed, European Central Bank and Bank of England head the other way. The BOJ shift should reverse some of the yen weakness we saw in 2022.
China, too, is in a different cyclical position. Pandemic mobility restrictions limited 2022 growth, and early 2023 will likely be weak, also, as restrictions are relaxed and infections likely spread more widely. That landscape will keep China’s central bank on its path toward easier monetary policy, at least for the first part of the year.
Expect a Choppy Year for Financial Markets
What does all this mean for investors? The good news is that 2023 probably won’t be as challenging as 2022. Even if inflation falls only gradually this year, it will take pressure off of interest rates, especially since we think rate hikes will likely wrap up in the first few months of the year. An end to the hiking cycle should provide relief to stock and bond markets.
But it’s too early to sound the all-clear. A world with slow or negative growth and restrictive monetary policy is hardly favorable for financial assets, so expect a very choppy year. Markets will rally when inflation falls faster and boosts hopes of rate cuts. But markets will also stumble when inflation falls more slowly—or when central banks push back on the idea of easing. Expect that “good-news, bad-news” push and pull to last through most, if not all, of 2023.
We see a more favorable environment by 2024, with inflation more clearly under control and policymakers more inclined to boost growth. That makes 2023 the transition year from the woes of 2022 to the more benign environment we expect to see a few quarters from now. However, transitions can be challenging—2023 may be better for markets than 2022, but the ride will be anything but smooth.