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Been thinking about what could actually tank the market this year, and honestly, it's probably not what most people are obsessing over. Everyone's worried about AI stocks imploding or some recession shock, but there's a more mundane threat that could be way more dangerous - inflation creeping back up and dragging yields with it.
Here's the thing: the market's been on an absolute tear for three years straight. That kind of run is rare, and valuations are already stretched compared to historical norms. When you've got that setup, even a moderate shock can turn ugly fast. So will the market crash again if inflation rears its head? I think that's actually the most likely scenario we should be watching.
Let me break down why. Inflation supposedly peaked around 9% back in 2022, but the Fed still hasn't fully tamed it. Last I checked, CPI was sitting around 2.7%, which is still above their 2% target. And a lot of people I talk to still feel like prices are ridiculous - groceries, rent, everything. If that trend reverses and we start seeing inflation tick back up, that creates a real problem.
The Fed gets trapped in a bind. If they cut rates to help employment, inflation could spike. If they raise rates to fight inflation, they risk killing jobs and slowing growth. That's stagflation territory, and nobody wants that.
But here's the real kicker - higher inflation usually means higher bond yields. The 10-year Treasury was hovering around 4.12%, and we've already seen how nervous markets get when it approaches 4.5% or 5%. If yields suddenly jump while the Fed's been cutting, that's a double whammy. Higher yields mean higher borrowing costs for everyone, including the government. And when borrowing gets more expensive, stocks need higher expected returns to justify their valuations. A lot of stocks are already trading at premium prices, so there's not much cushion.
Wall Street's major banks are actually forecasting inflation could push above 3% this year before settling back down. JPMorgan's team is looking at 3%+ peaking before falling to 2.4% by year end. Bank of America has similar expectations - 3.1% peak, then down to 2.8%. If that happens and inflation actually does come back down, markets should stabilize. But that's a big if.
The tricky part about inflation is it can get sticky. Once people get used to higher prices, it's hard to shake. And even when inflation slows, prices don't actually fall - they just rise slower. Cost of living still feels brutal for most people.
Look, nobody can actually predict whether will the market crash again or when. I'm not saying go try to time it - that's a sucker's game. But understanding the real risks ahead matters. If inflation picks up, yields surge, and this doesn't turn out to be temporary, that could be the trigger that finally cracks the market's three-year winning streak. Keep an eye on inflation data and Treasury yields over the next few months. That's where the real action is.