Actual | Previous | |
---|---|---|
Month over Month | 1.7% | -9.7% |
Year over Year | 5.7% | 11.0% |
Definition
Description
If someone borrows $100 dollars from you today and promises to repay it in one year with interest, how much interest should you charge? The answer depends largely on inflation, because you know that the $100 won't be able to buy the same amount of goods and services a year from now, as it does today. If the CPI shows that prices are rising about 2% a year, then you need to charge 2% interest just to recoup your purchasing power at the end of the year. You might want to add in a few more percentage points for default risk and the opportunity cost, but the key variable in what interest rate you charge is the rate of inflation.
That basically explains how interest rates are set on everything from your mortgage and auto loans to Treasury bonds and T-bills. As the rate of inflation changes and as expectations on inflation change, the markets adjust interest rates accordingly. The effect ripples across stocks, bonds, commodities, and your portfolio, often in a dramatic fashion.
By tracking the trends in inflation (including farm prices), whether high or low, rising or falling, investors can anticipate how different types of investments will perform.