Oil, commodities, small-caps in focus amid inflation woes

Economic prints show inflation to be cooling, but could there be another round of inflation ahead for consumers? Marketgauge.com Chief Strategist Michele Schneider remains defensive in case of an inflation spiking, citing increased oil demand in commodity markets, the Fed's rate hike outlook, and how the Russell 2000 and regional banks are performing in 2023.

This post was written by Luke Carberry Mogan.

Video Transcript

JARED BLIKRE: Another round of inflation around the corner.

That doesn't sound like something a lot of people are expecting.

MICHELE SCHNEIDER: Well, we're really looking at the energy and oil market because a lot of the numbers that have come to date really have shown a decline that we saw in energy and oil.

And of course, that was a very celebratory reason to think that inflation had cooled and would stay cooled.

But what we're seeing now is just the reverse.

The CRB has gone up, and the oil market has inclined about 15%.

We're trading at around $81 a barrel right now, and that $80 a barrel was a really key area.

And of course, we have many, many stories, not just because of OPEC Plus.

But even here at home with the reserves being extremely low and demand being greater than what they thought.

So I'd say that before I would go in full hog into this prediction.

We have to continue really to watch what's happening there with oil.

Because regardless of the yields going up today, or the dollar going up, we know that there are factors in commodities that ignore all of that when we come into a real supply-demand situation.

So that's kind of what we have our eyes on right here.

JARED BLIKRE: All right.

What I have on the interactive right now, this is WTI crude oil.

We're just looking at that.

I want to show everybody the S&P-- the S&P Goldman Sachs commodity index.

This has been for a while, and you can see here just breaking through its negative trend line.

I think it's above the 200-day moving average as well.

There you go.

What's the importance?

What's the significance of this for markets in general?

Because a lot of times this just spells more inflation, something we've been talking about.

MICHELE SCHNEIDER: Well, it's kind of-- I think we're at a really interesting spot here, in terms of the consumer, and we can certainly talk about that sector in a moment.

But we have a situation now where the yields have gone up, obviously, right now.

People were looking based on what Powell said, and I've certainly heard many, many people talk about the potential pause or possibly pivot in 2024.

But essentially, what you've got right now is folks feeling it from two areas.