Yahoo Finance Yahoo Finance Sign in Search query Search for news or symbols Yahoo Finance An 'unfamiliar' era for investors has arrived after a 20-year 'regime': Morning Brief Jared Blikre Jared Blikre Wed, December 11, 2024 at 5:04 PM GMT+6 3 min read In This Article: StockStory Top Pick NVDA -2.69% ^DJI -0.35% QQQ -0.34% Advancements in Veneer Technology Could Make Them Cheaper Than You Expect (Explore) Veneers - Search Ads Ad This is The Takeaway from today's Morning Brief, which you can sign up to receive in your inbox every morning along with: The chart of the day What we're watching What we're reading Economic data releases and earnings It's December, and markets have slowed to a familiar holiday cadence. Volume is predictably receding, and volatility barely stirs. Whispers of a "Santa Claus rally" are lulling investors into a fragile complacency. Two catalysts threaten to upend the holiday detente. This morning's Consumer Price Index is expected to show November 12-month inflation ticking up to 2.7% as core inflation, which strips out food and energy, is expected to stick stubbornly to 3.3%. Meanwhile, next week's Federal Reserve meeting looms large, with policymakers debating whether to cut rates again — potentially stoking 2025 inflation — or hold firm. Together, these forces underscore what RSM chief economist Joe Brusuelas describes as a "regime change" in economics. “Twenty years of subdued inflation, low interest rates, a reduced cost of capital and financial leverage have given way to a new regime,” wrote Brusuelas in a note to investors, adding, "For many investors and firm managers, this era is unfamiliar." Brusuelas recently joined Yahoo Finance's Stocks in Translation podcast to expand on his regime change thinking, which he notes is really about the post-pandemic economy. "[The pandemic] wiped the slates clean," he said, ticking off a laundry list of changes that the shutdown and rejiggering of global supply chains have produced. Critically, when those supply chains reopened, they were vastly different, if not entirely new, he argued. "We're in a very different cost environment," he said, "and we're going to get a very different set of politics." Thinking ahead, the American people and industry will likely face fewer regulations, higher tariffs, lower taxes, stricter immigration, and a ballooning trade deficit. And while politicians typically jawbone a strong dollar, that strength tends to frustrate attempts to narrow a widening trade deficit — a key pillar of the incoming administration. All of this sets the stage for higher interest rates and higher inflation, argues Brusuelas. Even if price increases slow or halt, they're not going to deflate back to pre-pandemic prices. "Those prices have gone up," he said. "They are not ever going to reset to 2019 levels." While the cost of doing business might be heading higher, elevated interest rates could actually be a boon for economic stability.