This was a good week for inflation numbers, but whether it can last is the big question
There was more good news Friday
for inflation, as import prices fell more than expected and brought some
much-needed relief for consumers.
The report capped
off a relatively upbeat week for those worried about rising prices — and
“relatively” is the operative word — as the U.S. is on pace this year to import
just over $4 trillion of goods and services this year, according to the latest
Bureau of Economic Analysis data.
With Americans
already paying huge bills for food, energy and a host of other items in their
daily lives, any respite is a welcome one. After all, the monthly import price
drop of 1.4% was just the first this year, and the year-over-year increase is
still more than 8.8%.
That news followed
reports earlier in the week that both wholesale and retail price increases
abated for the month. Producer prices declined 0.5%, and consumer prices
including food and fuel were flat, both numbers owing largely to a sharp slide
in most of the energy complex.
People are
noticing: A New York Federal Reserve survey released Monday showed
consumers are expecting inflation to stay high but not by as much as previous
months. On Friday, the University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey — whose
ups and downs tend to ride in tandem with prices at the pump — was higher than
expected, though still just off record-low levels hit in June.
“There is a very long way to go before the Fed
will feel it has sufficient compelling evidence that inflation is moderating to
stop raising rates,” Guha added.
The Fed and
investors will get a look next week at how much of an impact inflation has made
on spending.
The Wednesday advance report from
the Commerce Department is expected to show a modest 0.2% headline gain for
July in retail sales after a 1% increase in June, according to FactSet. The
report is not adjusted for inflation.
However, there is
a wide range of opinion on where the numbers could land.
Citigroup said its
credit card data show a potential 1.1% decline for the month, while Bank of
America said it sees a 0.2% decrease, though control group spending — excluding
a variety of volatile categories — may have risen 0.9%.
Fed officials will
be watching closely to see larger trends in how inflation is impacting Main
Street.
“It does appear
that a tentative peak in inflation is in place,” said Joseph Brusuelas, chief
economist at RSM.
However, he said
this week’s numbers are likely to do little to sway a Fed intent on stomping
inflation down to the central bank’s 2% target.
“I think that the
July inflation does nothing to alter the path of Fed policy, and any notion
that a Fed pivot is at hand should be dismissed,” he said. “We are some months
away from any potential clear and convincing evidence that inflation is well on
its way back to the 2% target that currently defines price stability.”
No comments: