‘SuperCore’ Inflation Rises For 49th Straight Month As Spending Disappoints
The last month has seen US Macro data collapsing at its fastest rate in years…
Source: Bloomberg
…which, many believe, will also drag down inflation (and it has been)…
Source: Bloomberg
Today, we get to see The Fed’s favorite inflation indicator – Core PCE – which rose 0.1% MoM in May (after a revised +0.3% MoM for April) and in line with expectations. The headline PCE Price Index was unchanged MoM as expected as Durable Goods deflation trumped surging Services costs…
Source: Bloomberg
On a YoY basis, both headline and core PCE declined…
Source: Bloomberg
On a YoY basis, Durable Goods deflation is at its strongest in at least a decade…
Source: Bloomberg
More notably, the so-called SuperCore PCE rose 0.1% MoM, which saw YoY slow to 3.39%… which is awkwardly stagnant at elevated levels…
Source: Bloomberg
That is the 49th straight monthly rise in SuperCore prices with Healthcare costs soaring…
Source: Bloomberg
On a MoM basis, Income grew more than expected (+0.5% vs +0.2% exp) while spending rose less than expected (+0.2% MoM vs +0.3% exp)
Source: Bloomberg
Which accelerated both income and spending on a YoY basis (with the latter outpacing the former, of course)…
Source: Bloomberg
With wage pressures rising once again…
Government 8.5%, up from 8.4% but below the record high of 8.9%
Private 4.5% up from 4.2%
Source: Bloomberg
And after a series of revisions, the savings rate ticked up to 3.9% of DPI (from 3.7%) – the highest since January…
Source: Bloomberg
All of which takes place against a background of the sixth straight month of rising government handouts (well it is an election year after all)…
Source: Bloomberg
Finally, while acyclical inflationary pressures continue to drift lower, cyclical inflationary pressures remain extremely elevated…
Source: Bloomberg
A very mixed bag but nothing screams ‘automatic’ rate-cuts… and SuperCore refuses to budge.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 06/28/2024 – 08:44