Marketmind: Winging it
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[February 13, 2023] A
look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Samuel Indyk.
Super Bowl LVII was a finale for the ages, as star quarterback Patrick
Mahomes led his Kansas City Chiefs to a dramatic 38-35 victory over the
Philadelphia Eagles in Sunday's showpiece.
Ahead of the match, one statistic that blew this Englishman's mind was
the sheer volume of chicken wings that were set to be consumed over
Super Bowl weekend.
In a report released earlier this month, the National Chicken Council
said Americans were expected to chow down on 1.45 billion chicken wings,
an increase of 2% from last year, or the equivalent of 84 million wings.
That's a total of four wings each for every man, woman and child, and
enough to stretch from Kansas City's Arrowhead Stadium to Philadelphia's
Lincoln Financial Field about 62 times.
So why the 2% increase in demand? Well, if you're looking for deflation,
chicken wings are the place to find it.
According to the United States Department of Agriculture, wholesale and
retail wing prices are down double-digits from the same time last year,
which National Chicken Council spokesperson Tom Super says is one cause
for this year's demand uptick.
"The two main reasons are more favorable prices and more people getting
back to normal and gathering for the Big Game, whether at home or at a
bar/restaurant," Super said.
For markets and the Federal Reserve, one question might be whether a
decline in the price of chicken wings is a forerunner for another easing
of price pressures at Tuesday's readout of U.S. consumer inflation data.
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Football - NFL - Super Bowl LVII -
Kansas City Chiefs v Philadelphia Eagles - State Farm Stadium,
Glendale, Arizona, United States - February 12, 2023 Kansas City
Chiefs' Patrick Mahomes in action REUTERS/Brian Snyder
The report is expected to show consumer prices rose at an annual
pace of 6.2% in January, down from 6.5% in December and well below
June's four-decade peak of 9.1%.
Inflation remains the driving force for markets and with price rises
expected to have slowed again last month, the rally in stocks and
bonds could resume after the hiccup following January's staggeringly
strong labour market data.
But if markets are set to be cheering an easing of price pressures,
they might want to celebrate with something other than liquor, after
December's consumer price data showed the price of alcoholic
beverages was up 5.8% from the same period a year earlier.
Key developments that may provide direction to U.S. markets later on
Monday:
* U.S. results: FirstEnergy, Avis Budget, Palantir
* Auctions: Three- and Six-Month T-Bills
(By Samuel Indyk; Editing by Sharon Singleton)
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