The Year Ahead: 6 Trends to Watch for in 2022

By Geoffrey Smith

Investing.com -- It’s been a grueling 2021. Bereavement, illness, and economic hardship due to lockdowns have been the experience of all too many. However, the economic data show a vigorous rebound from the first year of the pandemic, with trade and employment growing rapidly. Those economic trends are set to continue in 2022, albeit at a more moderate rate. However, progress has been bought at the cost of what is arguably the biggest inflation threat since the 1970s and steering against that threat while avoiding a crash in markets that are still trading at historically high multiples will take some doing. Here are some of the big trends to watch as we enter 2022.

1. The Global Monetary Tightening Cycle

The next year will be dominated by rising interest rates. In truth, rising interest rates already arrived in style in 2021 in many parts of the world, but the Federal Reserve, guardian of the world’s reserve currency, has now made the process truly global.

The first rates to rise will be longer-term ones, as the Fed winds down within the short space of three months a quantitative easing program that is still running at $120 billion a month. It’s expected to raise the target range for Fed funds by as much as 75 basis points between March and the end of the year.

Whether it tightens by more or less will depend on the path of inflation in that period. Base effects and – more importantly – a likely slowdown in the economy as the excess savings of 2020 are finally spent, suggest that inflation should weaken in the course of the year: the Fed itself sees core personal consumer expenditures rising only 2.6% next year, after a 5.3% increase this year. The other major factor will be how much pressure the Fed comes under from Congress as the mid-term elections near in November.

Either way, as long as the Fed remains in tightening mode, the pressure on other central banks – with the exceptions of Switzerland, Japan, and possibly China – to keep tightening will remain.

2. Covid: Year 3 And Counting...

The course of the pandemic will arguably be the greatest single influence on the thinking of the Fed and many other central banks. As of the time of writing, the Omicron variant is on a tear through Europe and is now present in 43 of the U.S.’s 50 states.

Not enough is known about Omicron to make any forecast with confidence. Initial studies suggest that it is less likely to lead to serious illness than the hitherto-dominant Delta strain, but that it also evades the immune defenses generated by a two-shot vaccination, allowing it to spread faster.