Warren Buffett is right, inflation is running rampant

Joe Money

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Warren Buffett is right, inflation is running rampant

Tue, May 4, 2021, 6:53 AM·3 min read

Inflation looks to be in warp overdrive judging by the worrying commentary by corporate chieftains this earnings season.

Mentions of inflation on first quarter corporate earnings calls have exploded 800% year-over-year, according to new research from Bank of America Securities strategist Savita Subramanian. By sector, inflation was most prevalent in materials, consumer and industrial companies. Most sectors have cited inflation more than the historical norm, Subramanian notes.

Some of the biggest jumps in inflation mention were tied to transportation, materials and labor outlays.

So far, inflation hasn't crushed the bottom lines of companies as the world economies are roaring back and demand is strong for goods and services. "Higher mentions of pricing, coupled with a record net margin, suggest inflation so far has been positive for corporate earnings," Subramanian says.

Out of the 303 companies from the S&P 500 that have reported, earnings growth is tracking up 41% BofA's data shows.

BofA's data highlights a serious pickup in inflation being felt throughout corporate America, which could pressure profits later this year as economic growth cools.

"We are seeing substantial inflation," Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett said at the Berkshire Hathaway annual shareholder meeting exclusively live-streamed by Yahoo Finance. "We are raising prices. People are raising prices to us, and it's being accepted."

Buffett called out much higher steel costs impacting Berkshire's housing and furniture businesses.


"People have money in their pocket, and they pay higher prices... it's almost a buying frenzy," Buffett said, noting that the economy is "red hot."

Higher prices for consumers
After a strong first quarter, mattress giant Tempur Sealy said it was forced to impose a price increase on April 1 because of higher chemical costs.

"Clearly we are dealing with inflation like all manufacturers. Our business model is when we have input cost increases we pass them on to the end consumer," Tempur Sealy Chairman and CEO Scott Thompson said on Yahoo Finance Live. "We had a large price increase in the fourth quarter of last year, and had another price increase on April 1."

Proctor & Gamble recently said it would begin to hike prices on baby care, feminine care and adult incontinence products in the United States. Price increases will range from mid- to high-single digit percentages. The hikes will go into effect in mid-September.

Whirlpool CFO Jim Peters recently told Yahoo Finance Live the appliance maker just jacked up prices by 5% to 12% to counteract rising steel costs.

Kleenex maker Kimberly-Clark said it will increase prices in the U.S. and Canada on the majority of its consumer products due to "significant" commodity cost inflation. The percentage increases will range from mid- to high-single digits and go into effect in June.

 
I haven't really notice it but I'm not shocked at all....if they can get away with it they damn sure will if people are still spending.
 
Bruh, when I saw the new Yukon Denali at $82K, I knew shit was getting out of hand. I think we're going to experience a major crash if things don't level out soon. Most people can't afford $100K transportation and $500K homes.

god damn, this is crazy I remember them costing around 35k
 
homes that you could buy for 85k back 15 years ago selling for 400k now and it's not a nice area, it's crazy out there.

You gotta make damn close to 6 figures to even afford a home right now.

yeah, a lot of that has to do with the pandemic. Building materials are up 200% year-over-year because production went down during the pandemic, so now developers aren't building fast enough to handle the great migration out of the bigger cities. A lot of people are waiting for the pandemic to be over before they move, everybody has been sitting still for the last two years. So housing prices are the highest they've ever been.

I want to see how the end to this eviction moratorium is gonna play out because back in January they were saying that it probably won't change anything. They're saying things won't level out until late 2022.
 
I'm speaking specifically about that breaking brown cult you belong to

If believing in a Black economic agenda and reparations is cultish, then I'm drinking the Kool-Aid!

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