Tuesday, December 16, 2025

Price Expectations Dynamics.....

Price expectations are participants' beliefs about the future direction of prices. These expectations are self-fulfilling to a large extent. In the broader economy, if consumers expect prices (inflation) to rise significantly, they will increase their purchases now, which actually drives up current demand and prices. In the stock market, if investors expect a company to perform well in the future, they will bid up its stock price today, reflecting that optimism in current valuations. The dynamic nature of these expectations means markets are constantly reacting to new information and adjusting present prices accordingly.

Broader Market: Inflation and Economic Behavior

In the broader market (the real economy), price expectations primarily concern the general level of inflation and have a tangible impact on consumer and business decisions.

Consumer Behavior: Expectations of future price changes directly affect current spending habits.

Example: Expected Price Increase If consumers anticipate a significant rise in gasoline prices next month, they will rush to fill their tanks today, increasing current demand and potentially causing an immediate price spike.

Example: Expected Price Decrease Conversely, if people expect smartphone prices to drop with a new model release, they may postpone their purchases, leading to a fall in current demand and potentially forcing current retailers to lower prices or offer discounts.

Monetary Policy: Central banks, such as the US Federal Reserve or the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), actively manage these expectations. They use tools like interest rates to influence inflation expectations.

Example: Fighting High Inflation If the broader market expects high inflation, the central bank might increase interest rates. This makes borrowing more expensive, which cools demand, slows economic activity, and helps to anchor price expectations at a lower, more stable level.

Stock Market: Asset Valuation and Investor Sentiment

In the stock market, price expectations are about a company's future earnings and growth potential, which are then discounted to their present value to determine the current stock price.

Forward-Looking Mechanism: The stock market is inherently forward-looking. Current stock prices reflect the collective perception and anticipation of future performance, not just the current reality.

Example: Corporate Earnings Reports If a company's actual quarterly earnings are better than the "street expectations" (analyst consensus), the stock price will jump up, as the new information changes the outlook for future profitability. If the earnings disappoint, the price falls.

Investor Sentiment and Volatility: Psychological factors like "greed and fear" drive investor sentiment and can lead to significant market volatility and herding behavior.

Example: The "Fear of Missing Out" (FOMO), During a bull market, positive expectations and FOMO can drive stock prices to potentially unsustainable levels (a bubble). When sentiment reverses due to new concerns (e.g., a looming recession or geopolitical event), panic selling can cause sharp declines, as investors expect prices to fall further.

Discount Rates: Price expectations in the form of expected future returns are used to discount a company's future cash flows. Higher expected inflation often leads to higher discount rates, which reduces the present value of future cash flows, putting downward pressure on stock prices, especially for "growth" stocks that promise returns further in the future.

Price expectations act as a powerful, self-reinforcing mechanism in both the broader and stock markets. In the real economy, they govern the dynamics of supply and demand for goods and services and are the primary target of central bank monetary policy aiming for price stability. In the financial markets, expectations are synthesized into asset prices daily, reflecting collective belief in future corporate earnings and economic conditions. While the stock market can sometimes lead the real economy, the core principle remains consistent: current prices are a function of what participants believe the future holds, making expectations a critical, dynamic force in economic and financial systems. Price expectations are a central driver of economic activity, operating differently in the broader market, where they primarily influence inflation and consumer behavior, versus the stock market, where they determine asset valuations and investor sentiment. In both arenas, current prices are largely a reflection of anticipated future outcomes. 

Monday, December 15, 2025

The Game of Expectations.....

 Stock markets are mechanisms of collective foresight. The current price of a stock is not just a reflection of its present value, but primarily a consensus forecast of all its future earnings and risks. When this consensus is fractured, prices shift as new information arrives and perspectives collide. However, a fascinating dynamic occurs when the market achieves near-perfect agreement. If "everybody" expects a stock to reach a specific, high valuation, this universal expectation ceases to be a future prediction and becomes an immediate market reality.

The Mechanism of Price Adjustment

In an efficient market, expectations drive present action. If every single investor believes a stock that currently trades at $50 is "truly" worth $100 and will inevitably reach that price, none of them will be willing to sell at $50, and every potential buyer will be eager to purchase at any price below $100.

Immediate Demand Surge: All investors holding the stock will raise their asking price toward $100, while all investors wishing to buy will bid aggressively up to $100.

Price Discovery: Through the rapid interaction of bids and asks, the market quickly discovers the new equilibrium price.

Stabilization: The stock price spikes almost instantaneously to $100. Once the price hits $100, the buying frenzy subsides because the expected upside has been fully realized and "priced in."

The price reaches the expected high now because the future expectation is already a present fact known to everyone. There is no informational advantage left to exploit.

Example: The "Tech Unicorn" IPO

Consider a hypothetical, highly anticipated tech company named "Innovate Corp." Everyone—analysts, institutional investors, and retail traders alike—unanimously agrees that Innovate Corp. stock, which is about to IPO at $20 per share, is a game-changer and has an intrinsic value of at least $100 per share.

Before Trading Opens: The consensus is clear: $100 is the fair price.

At Market Open:

Sellers (the original owners/underwriters) have virtually no incentive to sell at $20 because they believe it's worth $100. They hold out for a higher price.

Buyers flood the market with orders to buy shares, willing to pay up to $100 each.

The Result: The opening trade doesn't happen at $20. The stock price immediately "gaps up" and opens at, or very close to, $100 per share as demand massively overwhelms supply at lower prices.

After this initial surge, the stock price hovers around $100. For the price to move significantly higher, new information that exceeds the universal expectation (e.g., news that the company discovered a second revolutionary product, suggesting a $150 value) would be required.

If every market participant expects the same high price for a stock, the outcome is counterintuitively simple: the expected future price becomes the current market price. The stock experiences an immediate and sharp appreciation, as the collective "wisdom" of the crowd is priced into the asset instantaneously. The market rapidly achieves a new equilibrium, and subsequent price movement requires the introduction of new, previously unconsidered information to shift that universal expectation. When all market participants unanimously expect a single, high future price for a stock, the stock price typically rises immediately to that expected high price and then stabilizes, reflecting the collective positive sentiment. This phenomenon is a fundamental principle of efficient market hypothesis (EMH) and price discovery, where all available information—in this case, the universal high expectation—is instantly incorporated into the current stock price. 

Sunday, December 14, 2025

INDIA's Technological Progress is not Increasing Real Wages....

India has demonstrated remarkable technological advancement and is a major global player in IT and IT-enabled services, with its digital economy projected to contribute nearly one-fifth of its GDP by 2030. Initiatives like the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) and Aadhaar have transformed service delivery and financial inclusion. Despite this prowess and a high real GDP growth rate (estimated at 8.2% in Q2 of FY 2025-26), these gains have not resulted in a proportional rise in overall economic indicators like productivity across all sectors, lower prices, or significantly higher real wages and incomes for the majority of its population.

Barriers to Translating Tech Progress into Broad Economic Benefits

Uneven Structural Transformation and the Dominance of the Informal Economy: India's economic growth has primarily been driven by the high-productivity services sector, which tends to be skill-intensive. Over half of the workforce remains in low-productivity sectors like agriculture, construction, and informal trade. The large informal sector often operates with older technology and has limited capacity to adopt advanced innovations, thereby hindering aggregate productivity gains and keeping wages low.

Skill Mismatch and Wage Stagnation: Technological advancements have been "skill-biased," increasing demand for high-skilled labor while having a less pronounced impact on the low-skilled workforce. This creates a significant gap between the skills demanded by growing sectors (e.g., AI, IT) and those possessed by the majority of the workforce. The oversupply of skilled labor relative to the demand has also contributed to a stagnation of real wages for many, with data showing a decline in labor's share of Gross Value Added (GVA) in some periods.

Insufficient Investment in R&D and Innovation Ecosystem: India's Gross Domestic Expenditure on R&D (GERD) is only about 0.7% of GDP (2022 data), significantly lower than countries like China (2.4%) and the US (3.6%). This limited investment, coupled with a traditional mindset that prioritizes securing safe jobs over risk-taking innovation, inhibits the development of a robust, homegrown innovation ecosystem.

Limited Manufacturing Growth: Unlike East Asian economies, India's manufacturing sector has not grown sufficiently to absorb the surplus agricultural labor. This sector faces challenges like infrastructure deficits, complex labor laws, and a reliance on low-cost labor rather than automation, leading to low productivity growth and limiting job creation for the masses.

Capital-Biased Growth: Data suggests that the benefits of capital accumulation and technological changes have predominantly favored capital owners over labor, contributing to increased income inequality.

Lack of Industry-Academia Collaboration: Weak linkages between research institutions (like the IITs) and industry hinder the commercialization of innovative ideas, leading many talented graduates to pursue opportunities abroad (brain drain).

While India's technological progress is undeniable, its impact remains concentrated within specific high-skilled, capital-intensive sectors. The broad economic benefits, such as widespread productivity gains, lower prices, and higher real incomes for all, are constrained by deep-seated structural issues. Addressing these challenges requires strategic policy interventions focused on massive skill development, fostering an inclusive innovation ecosystem, boosting the manufacturing sector's capacity to create formal jobs, and increasing R&D investment. By doing so, India can better leverage its technological prowess to ensure more equitable and inclusive economic prosperity. India's significant technological progress, particularly in the digital and services sectors, has not translated into widespread innovation, productivity, lower prices, and higher real wages for the broader population due to structural economic issues, skill mismatches, low R&D investment, and a large informal economy. Economic growth has been services-led, largely bypassing the labor-intensive manufacturing sector where most jobs could be created for the low-skilled workforce.

Friday, December 12, 2025

The US Might De-anchor.....

 The Federal Reserve operates under a dual mandate from Congress: to achieve maximum employment and maintain price stability, the latter being defined by the Fed's 2% annual inflation target. Central bank credibility is crucial, as it anchors market and public inflation expectations. When the public trusts the Fed to keep prices stable, their expectations for future inflation remain low and stable, which in turn helps the Fed achieve its goals with less economic disruption. The current scenario presents a conflict: inflation is above target, but potential economic slowdowns due to trade frictions (tariffs) might argue for stimulus (rate cuts).

The Impact on Credibility

Cutting rates in this environment would likely have several negative impacts on the Fed's credibility:

Signals a De-prioritization of Price Stability: The fundamental monetary policy theory states that raising rates combats inflation by making borrowing more expensive and slowing economic activity. Cutting rates when inflation is above target suggests the Fed is willing to tolerate higher inflation, directly contradicting its commitment to the 2% target.

Risks Unanchoring Inflation Expectations: If markets perceive the Fed is not committed to fighting inflation, they may raise their own inflation expectations. This can lead to a self-fulfilling prophecy, where businesses and consumers act on these higher expectations (e.g., demanding higher wages, raising prices), potentially embedding persistent inflation into the economy.

Perception of Political Influence: The scenario mentions tariff frictions, which often involve political dimensions. If the executive branch is pushing for rate cuts (a recurring theme in recent history, such as during the Trump administration) and the Fed complies despite data suggesting otherwise, it could be seen as caving to political pressure, compromising its independence and, consequently, its credibility.

Internal Dissent as a Signal: High levels of dissent within the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), the Fed's decision-making body, would underscore the lack of a unified front and further undermine public confidence.

Examples and Data

Historical Parallel (Hypothetical from recent news): In late 2024 and 2025, when inflation was slightly above target (e.g., consumer prices rising 2.9% year-over-year, 0.9% above the 2% target), the Fed did consider rate cuts to mitigate the economic risks from ongoing tariff wars. Some officials argued forcefully against cuts, stating "inflation is too hot". The resulting dissent (a 9-3 vote in one instance) highlighted the internal conflict and the risk to credibility.

Market Data: When the market is nervous about persistent inflation, it demands higher yields on long-term bonds to compensate for the potential erosion of returns. If the Fed cuts short-term rates but long-term bond yields remain high or rise, it signals the bond market's skepticism about the Fed's ability to manage long-term inflation, a direct reflection of weakened credibility.

A decision to cut interest rates with inflation at 3% amid trade tensions would likely be interpreted as the Fed prioritizing short-term economic stimulation (addressing potential job losses from tariffs) over its core mandate of price stability. While tariffs can have a complex, two-sided effect on the economy, potentially leading to both an initial slowdown (negative demand shock) and later cost-push inflation, cutting rates would primarily fuel the latter. The move would risk unanchoring inflation expectations and lead to a significant loss of credibility, making it much harder for the Fed to control prices in the future and potentially resulting in a more painful economic adjustment down the line. A Federal Reserve (Fed) interest rate cut when inflation is 1% over the 2% target (meaning inflation is at 3%) and amid tariff frictions would significantly undermine its credibility. The action would conflict with the Fed's primary mandate of price stability and could lead markets to believe the central bank is prioritizing other factors (like employment or political pressure) over its stated inflation target. 

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

The Dual Mandate and Policy Signals.....

Central banks manage a delicate balance between controlling inflation (price stability) and fostering economic growth (output stability). The RBI communicates its future intentions to the market through its policy "stance" (accommodative, neutral, or tightening) and its operational tools (like the repo rate, CRR, and OMOs). Clarity in communication is crucial for market participants (businesses, investors, borrowers, and savers) to form accurate expectations, which in turn influence their economic decisions. A neutral stance suggests flexibility and data dependency, while operational liquidity measures have a direct, tangible impact on money supply and interest rates.

The Confusion in Market Expectations

The conflict between a neutral stance and expansionary liquidity measures creates market confusion in several key ways:

Mixed Signals on Future Rate Trajectory: A neutral stance implies that a rate hike or a rate cut is equally possible, depending on incoming data. However, announcing OMO purchases (which inject liquidity) or hinting at CRR reductions (which free up bank funds for lending) are essentially expansionary actions that the market interprets as a prelude to rate cuts (an accommodative bias). This disparity in signal makes it difficult for market participants to confidently predict the direction of future interest rates.

Uncertainty Over Policy Priority: The market is left guessing whether the RBI's primary concern is inflation or growth. The official neutral stance suggests a balanced view, but actions that increase the money supply are generally aimed at stimulating a slowing economy. This ambiguity leads to divergent interpretations and hinders the formation of a unified market consensus on the central bank's actual priority.

Challenge in Pricing Financial Instruments: Financial markets price assets based on expectations of future interest rates and economic conditions. When the RBI's stance (communication) and actions (liquidity management) seem misaligned, it increases volatility and makes it difficult for banks and investors to price loans, bonds, and other financial instruments accurately. For instance, bond yields might initially react to the OMOs (expecting lower future rates) but remain volatile due to the uncertainty implied by the "neutral" label.

Recent Examples and Data

A key example of this dynamic occurred during the RBI's December 2025 monetary policy review:

Policy Stance and Rate Action: The RBI's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) cut the repo rate by 25 basis points to 5.25% while maintaining a neutral stance.

Liquidity Measures: Concurrently, the RBI announced a commitment to purchase government bonds worth up to ₹1 lakh crore through OMOs and a $5 billion buy-sell swap to inject liquidity and stabilize currency markets.

Market Reaction and Confusion:

The market initially reacted enthusiastically to the rate cut and liquidity infusion, pushing up equity markets and leading to expectations of further easing (a "dovish" interpretation).

However, the retention of the "neutral" stance, despite the rate cut and OMOs, led some economists to caution that the extent of future easing might be limited and data-dependent, rather than the start of a prolonged cutting cycle.

The MPC also revised the CPI inflation forecast for FY26 to a low of 2% but noted ongoing risks from global factors. This created a perception that the RBI was aggressively focused on growth, which contrasted with the cautious, balanced signaling of a neutral stance.

The Reserve Bank of India's (RBI) simultaneous pursuit of a 'neutral' monetary policy stance while actively injecting liquidity through tools like the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) and Open Market Operations (OMOs) can confuse the market by sending mixed signals about its future intentions. A neutral stance typically implies a data-dependent, "wait-and-watch" approach with no inherent bias toward easing or tightening, but liquidity injections are a form of de facto easing, creating uncertainty about the RBI's true commitment to either growth or inflation control. Clear and consistent central bank communication is paramount for stable market expectations and efficient policy transmission. When the RBI pairs a "neutral" policy stance with actions that strongly lean towards monetary easing, it creates a communication gap. This results in market uncertainty as participants attempt to reconcile the stated "neutrality" with the operational "accommodation". To minimize confusion, the RBI could ensure its forward guidance and liquidity management tools are more explicitly aligned, providing a unified message about its short-term priorities and long-term commitment to its flexible inflation targeting framework.

Tuesday, December 9, 2025

The Role of Credibility and Expectations in Monetary Policy.....

Monetary policy operates with a significant lag, meaning today's interest rate decision affects inflation several quarters in the future. Therefore, a central bank's ability to achieve price stability and support growth depends heavily on its credibility and how effectively it can anchor the public's expectations of future inflation. When the public forms "rational expectations" and aligns its decisions with the RBI's transparent forecasts, the intended policy outcomes are achieved more smoothly, without significant disruptions to real economic activity.

Effects on Prices

If people believe the RBI's inflation projections, the primary effect on prices is increased stability and reduced volatility.

Anchoring of Expectations: Credible RBI projections act as a nominal anchor for the economy. Businesses are less likely to raise prices speculatively, and workers are less likely to demand excessive wage increases if they are confident that future inflation will remain low and stable, within the RBI's target band of 4% (±2%).

Preventing Wage-Price Spirals: In a high-inflation scenario, workers often demand higher wages to compensate for the rising cost of living, which in turn increases business costs and leads to further price hikes, creating a spiral. If the public believes the RBI will successfully curb inflation, these second-round effects are mitigated, and wage and price adjustments remain moderate.

Efficient Price Setting: Firms can make more informed pricing decisions with less uncertainty about future costs and demand conditions, leading to more efficient markets and less price volatility.

Effects on Growth

Stable inflation expectations provide a conducive environment for sustainable economic growth.

Lower Interest Rates and Investment: Anchored inflation allows the RBI more policy space to keep interest rates lower for longer, or to cut rates when needed to stimulate the economy, without immediately triggering fears of runaway inflation. Lower borrowing costs encourage businesses to invest in new projects and individuals to make big-ticket purchases (e.g., homes, vehicles), boosting aggregate demand.

Reduced Uncertainty: Predictable prices reduce uncertainty for investors and consumers, encouraging long-term planning, savings, and investment. This fosters a stable macroeconomic environment essential for sustained growth.

Supportive Policy Mix: When the public trusts the RBI's commitment to price stability, it provides cover for coordinated fiscal and monetary policy support for growth, as seen in recent Indian economic outcomes.

Recent Data and Examples from India

The recent period in India provides a clear example of this dynamic at play.

Inflation Moderation (2025): India's retail inflation (CPI) has generally remained within or below the RBI's target band in 2025, falling to a record low of 0.25% in October 2025, largely due to easing food prices and timely government supply-side interventions.

RBI Action and Credibility: In response to the benign inflation outlook, the RBI's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) revised its inflation projection for FY2025-26 downwards to 2% and, in a significant move, upgraded the GDP growth forecast for the same fiscal year to 7.3%. The subsequent decision to cut the policy repo rate was met with market anticipation, as analysts expected the downward revision, demonstrating high central bank credibility.

Positive Feedback Loop: The actual moderation of inflation reinforced public confidence in the RBI's projections and policy framework. This "goldilocks period" of robust growth and benign inflation has been supported by positive expectations, leading to an uptick in non-food bank credit, rising consumer confidence, and increased private investment, all contributing to stronger GDP growth.

When individuals and businesses in India believe and act upon the Reserve Bank of India's (RBI) inflation projections, it significantly enhances the effectiveness of monetary policy, leading to greater price stability and more stable economic growth. This mechanism, rooted in the theory of rational expectations, helps to prevent volatile price and wage spirals and allows the RBI greater flexibility to manage short-term economic shocks. When the public forms decisions based on the RBI's inflation projections, a virtuous cycle is created: the central bank's communication becomes a powerful tool, guiding private sector behavior toward price stability. This collective belief and action in alignment with the RBI's goals helps in anchoring inflation expectations, suppressing volatile wage and price dynamics, and ultimately provides the stable, low-inflation environment necessary for vigorous and sustainable economic growth. The recent Indian experience highlights how strong central bank credibility translates into tangible positive macroeconomic outcomes.

Monday, December 8, 2025

The Power of Expectations.....

 In modern macroeconomics, expectations are not passive predictions; they are active drivers of economic behavior. The theory of rational expectations posits that individuals, businesses, and investors use all available information, including past experiences and current policy announcements, to form the most accurate possible forecasts about the future. A self-fulfilling expectation occurs when an expectation, simply by existing and influencing behavior, causes the predicted event to happen. When economic actors rationally expect the RBI's inflation projection to be accurate, they make decisions (e.g., wage setting, pricing, investment) that align with that forecast, effectively making it a reality.

Dynamics of Economic Growth Under Self-Fulfilling Expectations

If everyone expects the RBI's inflation projection to be accurate and acts rationally, the following dynamics emerge:

Anchored Inflation: The primary dynamic is that inflation expectations become firmly anchored to the RBI's stated target (currently a band of 4% +/- 2%). If the RBI projects inflation will be, for example, 4.5% for the next quarter, businesses set prices and negotiate wages based on this figure, preventing a disruptive wage-price spiral.

Credible Monetary Policy: The RBI gains significant credibility. Its policy announcements are believed and acted upon, enhancing its ability to manage the economy effectively. This credibility is a valuable asset, allowing the central bank to influence economic conditions with minimal actual intervention.

Stable Planning Environment: A predictable inflation environment reduces uncertainty for economic agents.

Businesses can make long-term investment decisions with greater confidence in future costs and revenues, leading to increased capital formation and economic expansion.

Households can better plan their savings and consumption, as the purchasing power of their money is expected to remain relatively stable over time.

Effective Policy Transmission: Monetary policy actions (like adjusting interest rates) have their intended effects more smoothly. If the RBI raises interest rates to curb perceived inflationary pressures, rational agents who expect inflation to fall as a result will adjust their spending and borrowing behavior, reinforcing the policy's effect.

Sustained Economic Growth: The stability derived from anchored expectations creates a favorable environment for sustainable, long-term economic growth. By minimizing the "noise" of volatile inflation, the economy can operate closer to its potential output level, avoiding the disruptions caused by unexpected price shocks.

Example

Assume the RBI announces an inflation projection of 4% for the upcoming fiscal year.

Rational Behavior:

A labor union, believing the RBI, agrees to a wage increase of 4% for its members, seeking to maintain real purchasing power.

A business owner, expecting input costs to rise by only 4%, decides to invest in new machinery and raises product prices by a similar margin.

A lender sets interest rates on loans based on the expected 4% inflation rate plus a real return margin.

Self-Fulfilling Outcome:

Because wages and prices across the economy largely align with the 4% expectation, the actual inflation rate for the year ends up being close to 4%. The collective rational actions validated the initial projection.

Growth Dynamics:

Since the inflation was predictable and moderate, the real economy experiences a "goldilocks" period of stable prices and robust growth, as businesses and households enjoy certainty and act efficiently.

The dynamic of economic growth under rational, self-fulfilling expectations related to the Reserve Bank of India's (RBI) inflation projections is a powerful illustration of how monetary policy credibility can directly influence real economic outcomes. When the public trusts and acts upon the RBI's forecasts, their collective behavior can validate the central bank's projections, leading to a more stable and predictable economic environment, which in turn fosters sustainable growth. When economic actors form rational expectations based on the RBI's projections, a virtuous cycle of credibility and stability emerges. This scenario largely neutralizes unexpected inflation as a source of economic distortion, allowing monetary policy to effectively anchor prices and provide a solid foundation for sustainable economic growth. The power of self-fulfilling expectations in this context underscores the critical importance of central bank transparency, clear communication, and consistent policy to build and maintain public trust.

Price Expectations Dynamics.....

Price expectations are participants' beliefs about the future direction of prices. These expectations are self-fulfilling to a large e...