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Friday, March 29, 2024

US Consumer Prices Accelerate At Fastest Since Oct 2018

Courtesy of ZeroHedge View original post here.

Headline consumer price inflation was expected to accelerate its recent trend higher in December, and it did, but slightly disappointing.

Headline CPI rose 2.3% YoY (below the +2.4% YoY) but above November’s +2.1% and the highest since Oct 2018. Core CPI also rose 2.3% YoY (as expected)…

Source: Bloomberg

Goods prices barely managed to rise YoY in December as Services prices remained up around 3.0% YoY…

Source: Bloomberg

Energy and Autos saw MoM declines…

The index for all items less food and energy increased 0.1 percent in December after rising 0.2 percent in both October and November. The medical care index continued to rise, increasing 0.6 percent in December following a 0.3-percent increase in November. The prescription drugs index rose 2.1 percent, while the hospital services index increased 0.2 percent and the physicians’ services index advanced 0.1 percent.

The apparel index rose 0.4 percent in December following a 0.1-percent increase in November. The index for motor vehicle insurance rose 0.2 percent after falling in November. The index for new vehicles rose 0.1 percent in December, ending a series of five consecutive monthly declines. The indexes for recreation and for education also increased 0.1 percent in December.

The index for used cars and trucks fell 0.8 percent in December after rising in October and November.  The index for household furnishings and operations declined 0.4 percent in December, its largest monthly decline since December 2014. The index for airline fares fell 1.6 percent in December, its third consecutive monthly decline, and the index for personal care fell 0.2 percent.

Notably, shelter costs, which make up about a third of total CPI, decelerated…

They rose 0.2% after a 0.3% gain in November, and were up 3.2% year-over-year for the smallest advance since January last year. Both owners-equivalent rent, one of the categories that tracks rental prices, and rent of primary residence climbed 0.2% from a month earlier (up 3.69% YoY – lowest since Feb 2019).

The Labor Department’s CPI tends to run higher than the Commerce Department’s personal consumption expenditures price index, which the Fed officially targets. The core PCE index that policy makers watch for a better read on underlying price trends softened in November, rising 1.6% from the same month in 2018. Core PCE has held below the 2% objective for the better part of seven years.

Having seen all that though, we suspect this push higher in inflation will be dismissed at “transitory” by The Fed as an excuse to keep the liquidity flowing as the asymmetric response function of Powell and his pundits becomes ever more obvious.

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