Friday, April 1, 2022

The Fed's PCE lowball inflation gauge sets 40-year high as gas and food prices soar.

 NOTE:
The Personal Consumption Expenditures (aka PCE deflator) inflation gauge accompanied Thursday's personal spending and personal consumption reports -- both numbers reported including inflation (which makes no sense for accuracy, but does make the numbers look better),
Ye Editor

Source:

 "The PCE deflator jumped 6.4% in February compared with a year ago, with sharply higher prices for food, gasoline and other necessities squeezing Americans’ finances.

The figure reported Thursday by the Commerce Department was the largest year-over-year rise since January 1982.

Excluding volatile prices for food and energy, so-called core inflation increased 5.4% in February from 12 months earlier.

Robust consumer demand has combined with shortages of many goods to fuel the sharpest price jumps in four decades.


Measures of inflation will likely worsen in the coming months because Thursday’s report doesn’t reflect the consequences of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which occurred Feb. 24.

The war has disrupted global oil markets and accelerated prices for wheat, nickel and other key commodities.

Squeezed by inflation, consumers increased their spending by just 0.2% in February, down from a much larger 2.7% gain in January.

Adjusted for inflation, spending actually fell 0.4% last month.

The decline partly reflected a shift away from heavy spending on goods to a focus on services, such as health care, travel and entertainment, which consumers had long avoided during the worst of the pandemic.

Spending on such services grew 0.6%, the most since July, while purchases of autos, furniture, clothes and other goods dropped 2.1%.

Many economists had previously suggested that a shift away from goods purchases might loosen supply chain snarls and cool inflation.

But prices are still rising rapidly for goods, including a 1.1% increase in February.

... Last month, food costs climbed 1.4%, the most in nearly two years.

Energy costs spiked 3.7%, the biggest such increase since October.

The Federal Reserve responded this month to the inflation surge by raising its benchmark short-term interest rate by a quarter-point from near zero, and it’s likely to keep raising it well into next year.

Because its rate affects many consumer and business loans, the Fed’s rate hikes will make borrowing more expensive and could weaken the economy over time.

Michael Feroli of JPMorgan is among economists who now think the Fed will raise its key rate by an aggressive half-point in both May and June.

The central bank hasn’t raised its benchmark rate by a half-point in two decades, a sign of how concerned it has become about the persistent surge in inflation.

On a monthly basis, prices rose 0.6% from January to February, up slightly from the previous month’s increase of 0.5% and matching the highest monthly figure since 2008.

Core prices rose 0.4%, down from a 0.5% increase in January.

(Next month's PCE) will reflect the cost of a gallon of gas that shot up (after the Ukraine war began).

Gasoline was at a national average of $4.24 a gallon Wednesday, according to AAA. That’s up 63 cents from a month ago, when it was $3.61.

Michael Pearce, an economist at Capital Economics, estimated that the gas price spike will cost Americans an annualized $100 billion in March.

... Thursday’s report follows a more widely monitored inflation gauge, the consumer price index, that was issued earlier this month.

The CPI jumped to 7.9% in February from a year ago, the sharpest such increase in four decades.

... Fed officials project that inflation, as measured by its preferred gauge, will still be a comparatively high 4.3% by the end of this year."

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