It’s been five years since the pandemic broke global supply chains and three years since consumers experienced the biggest inflation spikes in decades. And investors are not past the sticker shock. Now, even as inflation nears central bank targets, few think it’s truly under control.
Globally, just 41% of investors think elevated inflation is finally in the rearview mirror. But this is a case in which a middling average fails to tell the whole story. Country to country and region to region, inflation concerns vary greatly.
In the US, only 26% are convinced that inflation is behind them, and 61% rank it as their top financial fear. Even as inflation approaches 2% goals set by central banks, nothing will bring everything back to 2019 levels. Prices have escalated over the past five years, and they’ll stay at those higher levels.
Talk of tariffs and trade wars leave investors waiting for yet another price shock.
For example, Japan has consistently exceeded the central bank’s 2% inflation target for three years and came in at 3.6% in March, but only 20% of investors think they’re past rising prices. Investors in Taiwan (20%), South Korea (28%) and Hong Kong (27%) do not yet see the light at the end of the tunnel.
However, investors in Latin America are feeling relief as the disinflation process continues, monetary policy is easing, commodity exports are picking up, and supply chains are improving. As a result, 65% in Argentina/Uruguay, 60% in Mexico, and 56% in Colombia/Peru say escalating prices are behind them.