Inflation 'won't be completely transitory,' JPMorgan strategist says

Meera Pandit, a global market strategist at JP Morgan Asset Management, joined Yahoo Finance Live to discuss the outlook for inflation and the supply chain crunch.

Video Transcript

BRIAN CHEUNG: Let's bring in Meera Pandit, global market strategist at JP Morgan Asset Management, for more on the market action as we start off this week. And Meera, we were having a pretty healthy debate on this program earlier in the show about inflation and the role that it's going to play. It seems like that's going to be the big focal point as earnings season chugs along.

What is your preview for what we should expect inflation to look like? Because we know Fed officials are saying it's going to be transitory, it's going to be transitory. But we have the White House now trying to talk to ports in October now, talking about the issues of trying to alleviate some of these price pressures.

MEERA PANDIT: We've seen some cracks to this transitory narrative. And I think that inflation has been persistently elevated for longer than we initially anticipated. Part of that is that the pandemic has lasted longer than we initially anticipated and has really come in fits and starts, which has been really hard for businesses to predict where to go next. And at the same time, the economy has really come roaring back, and the consumer is ready to spend. Demand is really high.

But I do think that as these inflation-- as supply chain issues do subside throughout the course of 2022, we're also going to start to see inflation moderate from these elevated levels. Now, it won't be completely transitory. Things like housing, things like food, we've seen wages come a little bit higher. So we're going to see higher inflation than we did during the last expansion. But it's going to come down and moderate from these levels.

BRIAN SOZZI: Meera, how fast do you think the US economy is slowing right now?

MEERA PANDIT: You know, even though we feel like it's slowing, and it certainly has slowed from second quarter GDP, we're still well above trend pace growth. If we think about the economy over the last 20 years, it's grown, on average, about 2%. We are well above that. And I think that in some ways, what we've seen with the resurgence of the pandemic is that it has really elongated the recovery, as opposed to destroy a lot of demand.

So I think that it does reduce the risk of overheating-- not much of a topic anymore. But it does mean that we are going to start to see that growth peter out a little bit and get closer to trend growth rates by the end of next year. Next year is really going to be the year of normalization.