Moran Monthly Digest: May 2026

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When the Middle Moves: What April’s Inflation Report Means for Your Portfolio

April’s inflation report landed on May 12th and delivered something markets weren’t prepared for: not just a hot headline number, but a broad deterioration across every major measure of underlying inflation — simultaneously.

Consumer prices rose 3.8% year-over-year in April, accelerating from March’s 3.3% pace according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Energy drove much of the headline increase, with gasoline up more than 5% on a seasonally adjusted basis. In isolation, that’s an explainable story. Markets had a ready-made narrative: geopolitical disruption, seasonal factors, categories that don’t tell us much about structural price pressure.

The Part That Mattered More

Core CPI — which excludes food and energy — rose 0.4% in April, doubling the 0.2% pace of the prior two months. Shelter, the index’s largest component, jumped 0.6%. But what made this report particularly significant was the behavior of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland’s underlying gauges.

Both median CPI and the 16% trimmed-mean CPI rose 0.4% in April — also double their March pace, according to the Cleveland Fed. These measures are specifically designed to strip out the most volatile components and focus on the middle of the distribution. When the headline is hot but these measures are calm, it’s fair to call the problem narrow. When all five major measures — headline, core, shelter, median CPI, and trimmed-mean — move in the same direction at once, that argument becomes very difficult to sustain. The underlying rate of inflation is now running well above the Fed’s 2% target.

What It Means for Monetary Policy and Bonds

The disinflation story markets had been counting on to unlock rate cuts took a meaningful hit in April. According to Bespoke Investment Group, real yields surged to their highest levels in a year, and Fed Funds futures moved to fully price in a rate hike this year — a significant pivot from where market expectations stood before the start of the Iran conflict. For bond investors, the implication is direct: duration should be managed intentionally in this environment.

A Stronger-Than-Expected Earnings Season

Set aside the inflation picture for a moment. Q1 earnings season closed as one of the strongest on record: per Bespoke Investment Group, the EPS beat rate landed in the 94th percentile historically and the revenue beat rate hit the 98th percentile. Guidance was constructive — 11.8% of companies raised guidance this quarter, in the top quintile historically, while guidance cuts came in at the bottom 10% of the historical range. The market as a whole is not expensive — but the concentration at the top of the cap-weighted index is significant, and a wave of high-profile IPOs is approaching that will ask public investors to extend those valuations further.

The Bottom Line for Long-Term Investors

The picture that emerges from May is one of genuine but uneven strength. Owning businesses with pricing power and durable earnings remains the most reliable long-term path. But with valuations stretched at the top of the cap-weighted index and a complex inflation backdrop, the discipline of selectivity matters more, not less. As Barron’s has noted regarding the coming IPO wave, in a bygone era a public offering was a way to get in on the ground floor — in 2026, it looks more like parachuting onto the roof.

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This commentary is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, a recommendation, or an offer or solicitation to buy or sell any securities. The views expressed are those of the author(s) as of the date of publication and are subject to change without notice. Past performance is not indicative of future results.

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