The numbers: A key gauge of U.S. inflation rose a sharp 1% in June, led by higher fuel prices, in a sign that price pressures in the economy are still intense and unlikely to relent quickly.
The increase in the so-called personal-consumption price index exceeded Wall Street’s forecast. Economists had predicted a 0.9% advance.
A narrower measure of inflation that omits volatile food and energy costs, known as the core PCE, rose by 0.6% . That was above Wall Street’s 0.5% forecast.
The rate of inflation over the past year climbed to 6.8% from 6.3% in the prior month — the highest rate since January 1982.
The core rate of inflation edged up to 4.8% from 4.7% in the 12 months ended in June. It had touched a 40-year high of 5.3% in February.
The Federal Reserve views the PCE index as the best barometer of inflation trends.
Big picture: The economy is slowing in response to rising inflation, higher interest rates and the end of government pandemic relief. If it slows enough, waning demand should reverse the increase in prices and help bring down inflation.
Yet the Fed’s new strategy of aggressively raising interest rates also threatens to plunge the economy into the second recession in three years, potentially throwing the U.S. into another period of “stagflation” — the combination of high inflation and weak economic growth.
Key details: The headline increase in the PCE price index was spurred in part by high oil and gas prices in June.
The good news? Oil prices fell sharply in July to offer consumers some relief, though prices are still much higher compared to a year ago.
Until the June reading, the core PCE index seemed to suggest that inflation in some parts of the economy was softening, but economists say the latest report is likely to add to the central bank’s short-term worries.
“The 0.6% June increase shows underlying inflation momentum is getting worse,” said senior economist Will Compernolle of Mizuho Securities.
Unlike it’s better-known cousin, the consumer price index, the PCE gauge takes into account how consumers change their behavior in response to higher prices. They might substitute cheaper goods such as ground beef for more expensive ones like ribeye to keep their costs down, for example.
The CPI climbed to a yearly rate of 9.1% in June to mark the highest level in almost 41 years.
Looking ahead: “Inflation and wages are not spiraling higher, nor are they showing strong downward momentum yet,” said chief economist Gregory Daco of EY Parthenon.
Market reaction: The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA,
Source: finance.yahoo.com