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Dips in US core and ‘supercore’ inflation could bolster a Fed hold

Published Fri, Sep 29, 2023 · 11:56 PM

A MEASURE of inflation closely watched by the Federal Reserve has now averaged near the central bank’s 2 per cent target for the last three months, another step forward in the Fed’s inflation battle and a sign that price increases have continued slowing despite better-than-expected job and economic growth.

Stripped of food and energy costs that Fed officials view as less indicative of underlying price trends, the “core” personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index rose just 0.1 per cent in August, a 1.2 per cent annual rate, and for the last three months has averaged right at the Fed’s target, government data on Friday (Sep 29) showed.

A separate “supercore” index, which measures services excluding energy and the housing costs that Fed officials are convinced are in for a sustained decline, also rose just 0.1 per cent in August versus 0.5 per cent in July – evidence that sustained inflation in important parts of the service industry, a concern of Fed officials for months, may be moderating.

It was a number welcomed by the Biden administration, whose management of the economy through the pandemic and subsequent outbreak of inflation, will likely be central to next year’s presidential campaign.

“The main story of all the naysayers was that you couldn’t get core inflation to come down without a big increase in job destruction. That is not what we’ve seen,” said Lael Brainard, director of the National Economic Council and a former vice-chair of the Fed. “We’ve seen continued job creation and inflation at the core has come down into the range we saw pre-pandemic.”

The US unemployment rate has been in a range of 3.4 per cent to 3.8 per cent, low by historical standards, since March of 2022, the month the Fed began a series of fast, inflation-fighting interest rate increases that was expected by many to lead to a recession and rising joblessness.

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With a possible US government shutdown beginning this weekend, the release on Friday could be among the last major data points the Fed has in hand for its Oct 31-Nov 1 meeting – should the stalemate in the US Congress over a spending bill last that long.

The Fed, which is self-funded, would continue operating even if the rest of the government does not. But despite its in-house expertise and ability to estimate what the economy is doing, the central bank relies heavily on official government data that would be put on hold if workers are told to stay home – including a jobs report due next Friday.

On its own, the PCE release left traders discounting the likelihood that the Fed will follow through with any further rate increases, despite projections issued at the Fed’s most recent meeting showing a majority of officials expect to raise the benchmark policy rate by another quarter point by the end of the year.

Given how month-to month-data are evolving, inflation by year’s end may be well below the projections given by Fed officials just two weeks ago, when policymakers at the median anticipated core PCE would end the year at 3.7 per cent, said Omair Sharif, president of Inflation Insights.

“Core inflation is likely to comfortably undershoot the Fed’s 3.7 per cent projection”, perhaps ending the year as low as 3.3 per cent, he wrote in an analysis after the latest PCE data were released. “Unless you have a sustained re-acceleration pencilled in for the core PCE, it will be tough to see the Fed hit their estimate.”

In August, core PCE was up 3.9 per cent from the year-earlier month, compared with 4.3 per cent in July.

That outcome, if affirmed in coming months, would likely lead the Fed to hold rates steady again at its Oct 31-Nov 1 meeting, as it did last week.

It could also bolster the case, emphasised more forcefully by some Fed officials in recent weeks, that the US may escape this bout of inflation without the sort of serious downturn or rise in unemployment that has accompanied past inflation battles.

Recent jobs data also showed important aspects of the labour market, such as the hiring and quits rates, beginning to behave as they did before the pandemic, a return to normal that Fed officials believe will help moderate price and wage increases.

“The Fed has the chance to achieve something quite rare in the history of central banks – to defeat inflation without tanking the economy,” Chicago Fed president Austan Goolsbee said on Thursday. REUTERS

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