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US monthly inflation slows; consumer spending surges

Published 03/29/2024, 08:51 AM
Updated 03/29/2024, 10:20 AM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A woman shops for groceries at El Progreso Market in the Mount Pleasant neighborhood of Washington, D.C., U.S., August 19, 2022. REUTERS/Sarah Silbiger/File Photo

By Lucia Mutikani

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. prices increased less than expected in February, with the cost of services outside housing and energy slowing significantly, keeping a June interest rate cut from the Federal Reserve on the table.

The report from the Commerce Department on Friday also showed consumer spending rising by the most in just over a year last month, underscoring the economy's resilience. The United States continues to outperform its global peers despite higher borrowing costs, thanks to persistent labor market strength.

"Core services inflation is slowing and will likely continue throughout the year," said Jeffrey Roach, chief economist at LPL Financial (NASDAQ:LPLA) in Charlotte, North Carolina. "By the time the Fed meets in June, the data should be convincing enough for them to commence its rate normalization process."

The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index rose 0.3% last month, the Commerce Department's Bureau of Economic Analysis said. Data for January was revised higher to show the PCE price index climbing 0.4% instead of 0.3% as previously reported. Goods prices rose 0.5% last month, boosted by a 3.4% jump in the cost of gasoline and other energy products.

There were also strong increases in the prices of recreational goods and vehicles as well as clothing and footwear. But prices for furnishings and household equipment, and other long-lasting manufactured goods were subdued.

In the 12 months through February, PCE inflation advanced 2.5% after increasing 2.4% in January.

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the PCE price index gaining 0.4% on the month. Though price pressures are subsiding, the pace has slowed from the first half of last year.

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Fed officials last week left the U.S. central bank's policy rate unchanged in the current 5.25%-5.50% range, having raised it by 525 basis points since March 2022.

Policymakers anticipate three rate cuts this year. Financial markets expect the first rate reduction in June. Fed Governor Christopher Waller said on Wednesday, "there is no rush to cut the policy rate" right now, but he did not rule out trimming borrowing costs later in the year.

Most U.S. financial markets were closed for the Good Friday holiday, with the exception of the foreign exchange market. The dollar slipped against a basket of currencies on the data.

Excluding the volatile food and energy components, the PCE price index increased 0.3% last month. That followed an upwardly revised 0.5% gain in January. The so-called core PCE price index was previously reported to have advanced 0.4% in January.

Core inflation increased 2.8% year-on-year in February, the smallest gain since March 2021, after rising 2.9% in January. The Fed tracks the PCE price measures for its 2% inflation target. Monthly inflation readings of 0.2% over time are necessary to bring inflation back to target.

Services prices increased 0.3%, slowing after a 0.6% jump in January. The cost of housing and utilities rose 0.5%. There were also solid increases in the prices of recreation services as well as financial services and insurance.

But the cost of dining out and hotel and motel rooms was unchanged, while transportation services barely rose and healthcare increased marginally.

PCE services inflation excluding energy and housing gained 0.2% last month after surging 0.7% in January. Policymakers are monitoring the so-called super core inflation to gauge their progress in fighting inflation.

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With inflation slowing consumers boosted their spending. Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity, jumped 0.8% last month. That as the largest gain since January 2023 and followed a 0.2% rise in January.

When adjusted for inflation, consumer spending rebounded 0.4% after dropping 0.2% in January. The increase in the so-called real consumer spending suggested that consumption likely retained most of its momentum in the first quarter, which bodes well for the economy's prospects.

But much of the spending was funded from savings as growth in personal income slowed. The saving rate dropped to 3.6%, the lowest level since December 2022, from 4.1% in January.

Latest comments

Bidenomics is working. soft landing delivered. first rate cut in june.
But inflation didnt go down - we are not at pre-inflation levels so BIDENOMICS - FAILED
Why do I keep getting the feeling that the only reason they want to cut is because of the fear of not being able to service our debt at these levels of interest rates.
Good point and likely one reason they are. There is very little economic data pointing to a need to cut rates, and historically they have always been more cautious about cutting rates. Given the troubles they have had with sticky inflation you would think they would be even more reluctant now to cut rates.
Wall St. priced in 6 rates cuts in Jan. Stocks continued to rise as Wall St. priced in 3 rate cuts in June. Sounds like these numbers shouldn't result in higher stock prices. Unless the current administration continues to pump more money into the economy to buy votes.
Or the stock prices don't rely on rate cuts as much as generally thought. Stock is an asset, you can't expect them to be priced lower if everything else gets more expensive, IMO.
Inflation is not slowing. Learn to listen to the Fed correctly, and to read inflation reports correctly. However we do need bag holders that just follow the manipulative headlines. Just look at the previous 2 month's CPI, PPI and PCE reports. Also the economy is robust, unemployment is low and consumer spending is up. Also, home pruces AND energy is up. Food soon to follow. Its just data without fear of pointing out that the 5 month rally was based on hope alone, not on hard data. GDP and initial jobless claims alone had been enough to cause selloffs up until recently... now their relation to the uptick in inflation is not considered. PCE report from last month just got revised up, ao technically the market needs to correct - and there wasnt any PCE indicator coming in favorable today, since they revised up data from previous reports. This is a new low for manipulation, had never seen anything like this. The disconnect from fundamentals is radical.
that Emilio is the truest thing anyone has said on this site,in a long time.
someone that Kelly is ignoring or has forgotten.
oops Kelly should have been... something....
The old less than expected scam pulled by Rooters
The old "less than expected" scam pulled by crooked media.
I pumped jas yesterday @5.35 a gal. Inflation is definitely back. This is just the start. Wait until oil goes to $100 a barrel in the summer.
My condolences to all the haters who were hoping Biden would screw up the economy.
Halfbright likes me cuz I'm a doddering old fool that waved in 9 million illegals from beephole places
Yeah, man! Recovered from the pandemic, avoided recession, passed bipartisan infrastructure investment bill, record domestic energy production, onshoring critical manufacturing, historically low unemployment, solid GPD growth, falling inflation and rising wages... Yep, by any empirical measurement, President Biden has royally screwed the economy!
unemployment was lower pre pandemic, growth is caused by 3 dollars of deficit spending for every dollar of gdp, record number of tax payer funded insurance, negative wage growth during bidens term inflation adjusted, insulin is the only drug reduced and that's because once again tax payers are footing the bill, stock market highs see deficit spending again. Economy is not healthy when people need part time jobs to afford to get by. but whatever helps you sleep. voters do know and that is why Bidens approval rating is lower than spam
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