Will be ‘viewed as another reason to wait’
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U.S. consumer prices jumped at the start of the year, tempering hopes for a continued drop in inflation and likely delaying any United States Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts.
The so-called core consumer price index, which excludes food and energy costs, increased 0.4 per cent from December, more than expected and the most in eight months, according to government figures out Tuesday. From a year ago, it advanced 3.9 per cent, the same as the prior month.
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Economists favour the core gauge as a better indicator of underlying inflation than the overall consumer price index. That measure advanced 0.3 per cent from December and 3.1 per cent from a year ago.
The figures further reduce already-slim chances that Fed officials will start lowering interest rates soon, and any additional re-acceleration might reignite talks that they will resume hikes. Some policymakers have said they want to see a broader easing of price pressures before cutting rates.
The S&P 500 opened lower and Treasury yields jumped after the release from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Traders pushed out bets of when the Fed will start cutting rates and marked down March odds to almost zero.
“The Fed will view this as another reason to wait until May or June, but the direction of trend is still lower,” said Kathy Jones, Charles Schwab’s chief fixed-income strategist. “With much of the increase due to housing, it’s a waiting game to see when those costs will come down.”
The figures reflected increases in the price of food, car insurance and medical care, and shelter costs contributed to over two-thirds of the overall increase. Outpatient hospital services and pet services both rose by the most ever in the month.
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Used cars dropped on a monthly basis by the most since 1969 after the methodology was updated. Broader goods prices and energy also continued to fall, underscoring policymakers’ concerns that the recent disinflation has been concentrated in a few categories.
Last week, the BLS’s annual revisions confirmed inflation receded as fast as initially reported at the end of 2023. But new weightings — which are effective as of the January figures — will place a greater emphasis on services and less on goods, which economists say will slightly boost the outlook for the CPI this year.
Shelter prices, which is the largest category within services, advanced 0.6 per cent, matching the most in nearly a year. Economists see a sustained moderation in this area as key to bringing core inflation down to the Fed’s target.
Excluding housing and energy, services prices climbed 0.8 per cent from December, the most since April 2022, according to Bloomberg calculations. While policymakers have stressed the importance of looking at such a metric when assessing the nation’s inflation trajectory, they compute it based on a separate index.
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That measure, known as the personal consumption expenditures price index, doesn’t put as much weight on shelter as the CPI does. That’s one reason why the PCE is trending much closer to the Fed’s two per cent target.
Friday’s release of the producer price index will provide more clues, as several categories within that report feed directly into the PCE calculation. January PCE figures will be released later this month.
Unlike services, a sustained decline in the price of goods over most of the past year has been providing some relief to consumers. So-called core goods prices, which exclude food and energy commodities, fell by the most since July.
Fed officials will have access to multiple inflation reports — including one more CPI print — before their next policy meeting on March 19-20. Though Wall Street has been pushing for the central bank to start easing rates, policymakers have indicated they’re likely to stay on hold for a fifth straight meeting.
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That’s in part due to the strength of the jobs market. A separate report Tuesday showed real earnings advanced by the most since July on an annual basis, extending a months-long streak in which wage growth has modestly outpaced inflation.
—With assistance from Kristy Scheuble, Matthew Boesler and Steve Matthews.
Bloomberg.com
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