Calgary Herald

Inflation, retail data bolster U.S. Fed’s go-slow approach

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The economic case for a Federal Reserve interest-rate increase in June just became a little less solid.

Inflation took a surprising step back in March at the same time retail sales dropped for a second month, according to a pair of U.S. government reports on Friday. Labor Department data showed the consumer price index fell a largerthan-forecast 0.3 per cent, while a measure excluding food and energy fell by the most since 1982.

While the pullback at retailers underscore­s a weak first quarter for consumer spending that economists had already pencilled in, the inflation data are what surprised them given recent signs that businesses had been able to regain pricing power. A further cooling of price pressures and modest household demand would raise questions about whether the economy could withstand a mid-year move by the Fed to lift borrowing costs.

“Both reports would be arguments in a case that a dove would make for why the Fed needs to be more patient,” said Stephen Stanley, chief economist at Amherst Pierpont Securities LLC. “It’s a relatively soft consumer performanc­e in the first quarter, and you couple that with a pretty abrupt halt in the gradual uptrend in inflation. If I were a dovish policymake­r, I’d say ‘what’s the harm in holding off a little bit and seeing how all this plays out.’ ”

That would make the June meeting more of a toss-up for a rate increase. As of Thursday, federal funds futures showed about a 57 per cent chance that policy-makers will raise their target rate for overnight bank lending. Financial markets in the U.S. were closed for Good Friday and the Easter holiday.

Retail sales were down 0.2 per cent last month after a 0.3 per cent drop in February that had previously been reported as a gain, Commerce Department data showed. Six of 13 major retail categories registered lower March receipts. At auto dealers, purchases fell 1.2 per cent after a 1.5 per cent slide a month earlier.

Low prices may have also played a role in restrainin­g total sales as the retail figures aren’t adjusted to account for changes in inflation.

To be sure, two more months of economic data will be available before the Fed’s June 13-14 meeting. Spending, which accounts for about 70 per cent of the economy, has room to pick up on the heels of steady hiring, healthier household balance sheets and more optimistic consumers. Income-tax refunds, which had been delayed earlier this year, may also provide a spark in the months ahead.

“The retail sales data are not adjusted for price changes which, as we have often noted, causes con- siderable misinterpr­etation of the underlying health of consumers,” Richard Moody, chief economist at Regions Financial Corp., said in a note after the report. “Ongoing improvemen­t in labour market conditions, rising household net worth, and notably higher consumer confidence leave us with a much more constructi­ve view of U.S. consumers than does the Q1 retail sales data.”

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN/ GETTY IMAGES ?? The decline in the consumer price index reflects a broad range of cheaper goods, including gasoline.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN/ GETTY IMAGES The decline in the consumer price index reflects a broad range of cheaper goods, including gasoline.

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