Friday, July 19, 2024

 

TAYLOR SWIFT INC.

Europe has a Taylor Swift problem: "Eras Tour" sparks inflation jitters

Photo illustration of Taylor Swift holding a sparking Euro symbol

Photo illustration: Sarah Grillo. Photo: Ricardo Rubio/Europa Press via Getty Image

The Swifties are wreaking havoc across the Atlantic — or, at least on European economic data.

Why it matters: "The Eras Tour" is a source of faster price increases as concertgoers spend on food, tickets and hotels. That's making for a cruel summer, pushing inflation rates higher with possibly more distortions to come.

  • Analysts attributed a surprise surge in Swedish inflation in May to three Swift concerts in Stockholm that drove up the city's hotel and other service prices.
  • It comes right as British and Eurozone policymakers are trying to assess whether price pressures have receded enough to lower interest rates.

What they're saying: Swift's concerts, along with other high-profile events like the Olympics and the Euro 2024 soccer championship, will boost inflation in the services sector this summer, says Krishna Guha, the vice chairman of investment advisory firm Evercore ISI.

  • "This will make it harder to read the underlying strength of inflation," Guha tells Axios. "The question is whether policymakers will be confident enough in their forecasts for continued disinflation to look through this."
  • Guha thinks that might be the case for the European Central Bank, though he's less certain about the Bank of England.
  • "We're at a turning point now as the Bank of England is eyeing the first rate cut. All the data matters," says Lucas Krishan, a macro strategist at TD Securities. The ECB is deciding when it might cut rates again.

By the numbers: U.K. inflation was hotter than expected in June. The service sector was to blame.

  • Hotel prices rose almost 9% last month. Live music costs have spiked in recent months: Prices are up over 20% in the March through June period, well above the average three-month gain of 5% between 2018 and 2023.

That may seem alarming, but you need to calm down: This looks to be the Swift effect at work — at least, partly. The data coincides with multiple concerts in the U.K. last month.

  • Swift's performances in London next month might have a larger impact since one lands on a possible "index day," when inflation data price quotes are collected.
  • Higher hotel prices could temporarily add as much as 0.3 percentage point to services inflation, Krishan estimated in a note appropriately titled "The New Taylor Rule."
  • Swift is, as far as we know, unrelated to Stanford economist John Taylor, who invented the Taylor Rule as a guide to where interest rates should be set.

The big picture: Even if concert effects are one-offs, European policymakers won't want to be reckless and take things too far, risking a nasty scar.

  • In the U.S., strong demand for Swift and Beyoncé concerts last year showed consumers had an appetite to spend, despite higher interest rates meant to chill demand.
  • A tourism boom in European nations including Portugal, Italy and Greece is already fueling services inflation in those nations.

European Central Bank head Christine Lagarde acknowledged earlier this month uncertainty around the "root cause" of lingering service sector inflation.

  • Lagarde joked: "It's not just Taylor Swift, others have come as well."

The bottom line: Central bankers in Europe who see surprisingly high services inflation in this summer's data may be reluctant to just shake it off.

Trump calls for UAW leader to be "fired immediately"

JULY 19,2024
Shawn Fain listens at a congressional committee hearing.

United Auto Workers president Shawn Fain in Washington, D.C., in March. Photo: Tierney L. Cross/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Former President Trump called for United Auto Workers president Shawn Fain to be "fired immediately" during his Thursday speech on the fourth and final night of the Republican National Convention.

The big picture: Fain endorsed President Biden in January after a months-long limbo over the administration's progressive push toward electric vehicles.

  • In a historic move last year, Biden joined the picket line with the UAW and Fain, whom he appointed to his export council in May.
  • Republican presidential nominee Trump also tried to win over auto workers, delivering a speech last year at an auto supplier in the suburban Macomb County, Michigan instead of attending the second GOP primary debate.

What he's saying: "Every single auto worker, union and non-union, should be voting for Donald Trump because we're going to bring back car manufacturing, and we're going to bring it back fast," Trump said Thursday.

  • "Those plants are going to be built in the United States and our people are going to man those plants, and if they don't agree with us, we'll put a tariff of 100 to 200% on each car," he added.
  • Trump said he would end the Biden administration's "electric vehicle mandate" on "day one."
  • Trump claimed Fain should be fired and the UAW "ought to be ashamed" over "large factories … being built across the border in Mexico" and "by China" to sell cars with "no tax, no anything." He did not elaborate on how he believed the UAW was responsible for this.

The other side: The UAW wrote in a post to X that tagged Trump's account that the former president is "a scab and a billionaire and that's who he represents."

  • They added: "We know which side we're on. Not his."
  • Fain went further in a Friday statement to Axios, calling Trump "the billionaires' hero, mascot, and lapdog."
  • "Don't get played by this scab billionaire. Stand up and fight for more," Fain said.