Week of Nov 17, 2023 Weekly Recap & The Week Ahead
Monday, November 20th, 2023I know where I’m getting out before I get in. — Bruce Kovner
1. US Inflation Broadly Slows, Erasing Bets on More Fed Rate Hikes — The so-called core consumer price index, which excludes food and energy costs, increased 0.2% from September, according to government figures. Economists favor the core gauge as a better indicator of underlying inflation than the overall CPI. That measure was little changed, restrained by cheaper gasoline. The Bureau of Labor Statistics figures reflected increases in rent and personal-care products and services, as well as health insurance due to a methodological change in how the government calculates it. Meanwhile, airfares and used-car prices declined.
Shelter prices, which make up about a third of the overall CPI index, climbed 0.3%, half the prior month’s pace. Economists see a sustained moderation in this category as key to bring core inflation down to the Fed’s target. A key measure of rent as well as hotel stays stepped down.
Excluding housing and energy, services prices climbed 0.2% from September and 3.7% from a year ago — the lowest in nearly two years — according to Bloomberg calculations. While Powell and his colleagues have stressed the importance of looking at such a metric when assessing the nation’s inflation trajectory, they compute it based on a separate index.
2. US Producer Prices Decline by Most Since April 2020 on Gasoline — The producer price index for final demand decreased 0.5% from a month earlier, a sharp slowdown that’s largely reflective of a decline in gasoline prices. Excluding food and energy, the so-called core PPI was unchanged, government data showed.
From a year ago, the overall measure was up 1.3%, while the core gauge posted the smallest annual increase since the start of 2021. Over 80% of the decrease in goods prices was due to a 15.3% slump in the cost of gasoline, the government report. Services costs, meanwhile, were flat after rising six straight months.
The week ahead — Economic data from Econoday.com: