Investment Institute
Macroeconomics

US reaction: Inflation slowing in line, but nothing weaker

KEY POINTS
Headline CPI inflation fell below 3% for the first time in over three years in July, coming in at 2.9%.
Core inflation also slowed, to 3.2% and also an over 3-year low.
Goods price inflation continues to flatter the headline, the annual rate still -0.4%.
Services inflation slowed to 4.9%, with a weak trend persisting in ex-shelter services, but shelter inflation made up a little of June’s weakness.
Today’s release suggests that inflation is on track to convince the Fed to ease policy by 0.25% in September – but does not suggest the need for anything more.
Market focus has switched to labour market developments, but we do not expect these to warrant the 100bps of easing priced by year-end and forecast only 50bps of cuts this year.

Headline inflation in July slowed to 2.9% - the first time it has been below 3% since March 2021. This was modestly below expectations, although with the monthly rise coming in at 0.155% vs the 0.2% consensus expected, the miss was modest (2.92%). Perhaps more importantly, core inflation also came in at 0.165% (versus a 0.2% consensus) and the annual rate slowed to 3.2%, in line with expectation, the lowest since April 2021.

A breakdown of July’s inflation revealed several moving parts. Fuel prices continue to contribute to a lower headline rate. Annual motor fuel price inflation is -2.3%. Goods price disinflation persisted, with a monthly fall of 0.3% in July – the biggest fall since January – and the annual rate remaining at -0.4%. This was driven by further steep declines in used car prices – down 2.3% on the month – and a fall in clothing prices. Both of these developments are consistent with an ongoing softening in consumer spending, although household furnishing completed their second month of solid gains following sharp contractions in April and May. The Fed’s focus will continue to fall on services inflation, which remains elevated at 4.9% - albeit a joint 2½ year low. Overall these rose by 0.3% on the month, firmer than the previous two months’ readings, but still below the average pace of H2 2023 and far below the pace set in Q1 this year. Exhibit 1 below illustrates that this was dominated by firmer readings again in shelter. Shelter inflation rose by 0.38% on the month, with a small rise in owner equivalent rents (0.36% and still below every reading before last month), but rents on primary residences rose by 0.49%, the biggest increase in a year and a move that suggests a basic catch-up from last month’s weak reading, with rents now averaging around 0.4% since December (barring February). By contrast, ex-shelter services inflation remained soft, rising by just 0.04% on the month again, in turn reflecting softer price increases in medical care (-0.25%), transport and personal care.     

In broad terms, today’s release can be seen as continuing to add to evidence that inflation is broadly in line with achieving the Fed’s target, consistent in our minds with a gradual removal of policy restriction over the coming quarters. However, the Fed’s – and broader market’s – focus has now shifted towards the labour market and a softer July report has reignited fears in markets of a sharper slowdown in activity ahead. In part, this should continue to reduce the emphasis on the monthly inflation reports as the Fed’s confidence of retaining anchored inflation expectations grows and its focus naturally shifts towards the outlook for inflation, not the outcome. That said, today’s report downplays some concerns that the Fed has overtightened policy – inflation looks likely to be coming down to around target rather than exhibiting signs of materially undershooting it. As such, we continue to view market expectations for 100bps of easing this year and another 100bp by this time next year as over-cooked. We expect the Fed to begin to gradual ease restrictive policy in September and forecast another cut in December. Beyond that outlook, we consider the outcome of November’s election as pivotal and beyond the honeymoon resurgence in Democrat fortunes under Vice President Kamala Harris’s candidacy, we still on balance expect to see Donald Trump return to the White House, something that we think could restrict the Fed’s ability to continue rate cuts in to next year.     

Financial markets saw some reaction to a basically ‘in line’ outcome. Chances of a 50bps cut in September were scaled back by around 8ppt, now seen at a little over a one-third chance, but the market still almost fully prices 100bps of cuts by year-end. As such, 2-year US Treasury yields rose 4bps to 3.97% and 10-year 3bps to 3.86%. The dollar rose around 0.2% immediately after the release, but retraced all of those gains. 

Exhibit 1: Services inflation stabilizes, with some rebound in shelter
Source: BLS, August 2024

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