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Monetary Policy & Inflation | US
Monetary Policy & Inflation | US
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April CPI was roughly in line with market expectations, with headline MoM below consensus and against Sam’s expectations of a small positive surprise in YoY core (Table 1).
A breakdown of key components also shows little change (Table 2). Core goods prices remained flat, OER was unchanged, and supercore inflation slowed but from a very high level in March. The median price CPI, a more reliable indicator of trend than core, was unchanged from March at 35bp.
Excluding used cars, core goods inflation remained close to zero, despite the recent increase in the PPI (Table 3; Chart 1). Used car prices fell at around the same pace as in March.
April OER was virtually unchanged from March at 42bp MoM (Chart 2). On a 6m SAAR basis, OER remained stable above 5.6%.
Housing market fundamentals suggest limited downside to housing services inflation (Chart 3). Vacancies are rising but remain well below pre-pandemic. Population growth (proxied by NFPs; Chart 3) is higher than pre-pandemic, adding to housing demand.
April core services ex housing (supercore) inflation slowed to 42bp, from 65bp in March (Chart 4; Table 4). On a 6m basis, supercore CPI inflation has been accelerating since Q3 2023.
Healthcare and transportation inflation slowed, but recreation and other personal services accelerated. Education and communication inflation was roughly unchanged, as was hotels.
Wages are the most important long-term driver of supercore inflation (Chart 5). Despite the ongoing slowdown in wage growth, super core CPI inflation has kept accelerating.
The Fed is hoping to go back to pre-pandemic inflation trends where zero goods inflation offset above-target housing inflation (Chart 6). Today’s CPI release did not bring inflation closer to that goal: housing inflation remains stable above 5.5%, and supercore CPI inflation trends remain upwards.
However, core CPI overall remained around 0.3%. So today’s print did not worsen the inflation outlook.
Furthermore, the Fed is more focused on PCE than CPI inflation. For core PCE to hit the Fed’s Q4/Q4 forecast of 2.6% YoY, core PCE would average 17bp a month until December. The combination of today’s CPI and yesterday’s PPI suggest April core PCE somewhat below 0.3%, i.e., still inconsistent with the March SEP 2024 forecast.
Following CPI and retail sales (which showed a limited downside surprise), markets raised expectations of Fed easing. The OIS based December 2024 FFR fell 8bp to 4.82%. Markets now price roughly two Fed cuts by end-2024.
I do not think today’s data justifies such optimism and stick to my expectations of stable 2024 core PCE around 3% and therefore of no cut in 2024.
In addition, I think the CPI print suggests the Fed will revise down the number of 2024 cuts in the June dot plot: I now expect one to two 2024 cuts, against three in the March 2024 plot.
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