The Denver Post

The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge has revved back up

- By Jeanna Smialek and Ben Casselman

There was a moment, late last year, when everything seemed to be going according to the Federal Reserve’s plan: Inflation was slowing, consumers were pulling back and the overheated economy was gently cooling down.

But a spate of fresh data, including worrying figures released Friday, make it clear that the road ahead is likely to be bumpier and more treacherou­s than expected.

The personal consumptio­n expenditur­es price index — the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation — climbed 5.4% in January from a year earlier, the Commerce Department said Friday. That was an unexpected reaccelera­tion from December’s 5.3% pace after six months of relatively consistent cooling.

Even after stripping out food and fuel prices, both of which jump around a lot, the price index climbed 4.7% over the year through last month — also a pickup, and more than expected in a Bloomberg survey of economists.

Those readings are well above the Fed’s goal of 2% annual inflation. And the report’s details offered other reasons to worry. The previously reported slowdown in December, which had given economists hope, looked less pronounced after revisions. Although price increases also had been slowing consistent­ly on a month-to-month basis, they, too, are now showing signs of speeding back up.

Stocks slumped to their worst week of the year, with the S&P 500 down 1.1% at the close of trading Friday, as investors digested the report and what it portends for the Fed, which has been raising rates aggressive­ly since last year. Financial markets have come under sustained pressure in recent weeks as investors have recalibrat­ed their expectatio­ns for how long inflation could remain high, and how high interest rates could go as a result.

The figures released Friday are just the latest evidence that neither price increases nor the broader economy is cooling as much as expected as 2023 begins. Employers added half a million jobs in January, wages continue to rise, and figures released Friday showed that Americans continue to spend freely on goods and, especially, on services like vacation travel and restaurant meals.

Fed officials in recent months have fended off criticisms, particular­ly from the left, that their inflation-fighting policies last year had gone too far and were threatenin­g to push the economy into a recession. But the latest data point to a different question: whether the central bank will need to do even more to bring inflation to heel. In particular, many forecaster­s now expect policymake­rs to raise interest rates higher than the range of 5% to 5.25% that they previously anticipate­d.

“In a nutshell, it means the job is not done. In fact, it is far from done, because inflation is much too high,” said Gennadiy Goldberg, a rates analyst at TD Securities. “The economy is still strong, and consumers are still spending money.”

President Joe Biden took a rosier view than financial markets, emphasizin­g the decline in gas prices and the strength of the broader economy.

“Today’s report shows we have made progress on inflation, but we have more work to do,” he said in a statement. “Annual inflation in January is down from the summer, while the unemployme­nt rate has remained at or near a 50-year low and takehome pay has gone up.”

Fed policymake­rs have raised rates at the fastest pace since the 1980s over the past year, lifting them from near zero to more than 4.5%. The goal was to slow consumer demand and force companies to charge less, ultimately wrestling inflation lower.

There are hints that those efforts are having an effect, despite the hot start to 2023. The housing market has slowed sharply as mortgage rates have risen, and manufactur­ers, too, have pulled back. Even consumer spending, viewed over several months, has tempered somewhat from its furious pace earlier in the recovery.

But what had looked like a steady, albeit gradual, slowdown is now looking even more gradual and not so steady. Personal spending, which fell slightly in November and December, jumped 1.8% in January, faster than inf lation. Incomes rose as well, which could help keep spending strong in the months ahead.

The remarkable resilience of consumers and the job market suggests that, despite the dour prediction­s of many forecaster­s, the economy is in little imminent risk of falling into a recession. But it also could make it difficult for the economy to slow enough that businesses charge less and inflation eases fully back to normal. That could, in turn, force the Fed to get even more aggressive — and increase the risk of a more severe recession down the road.

Officials signaled in December that they ultimately might need to lift rates to just above 5%, but those estimates have crept slightly higher in recent weeks as policymake­rs have reacted to surprising­ly strong data on jobs and spending.

Goldberg said Friday’s report was sure to spur speculatio­n in markets that the Fed might speed up its rate increases, moving by a half-point rather than a quarter-point in March. Indeed, investors increased their bets for a half-point increase in March in the wake of the report, although expectatio­ns still tilted toward a quarter-point increase.

 ?? CASEY STEFFENS — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Shoppers enter a Lululemon store in Manhattan on Feb. 2. The Federal Reserve is likely to keep raising rates as inflation proves hard to snuff out.
CASEY STEFFENS — THE NEW YORK TIMES Shoppers enter a Lululemon store in Manhattan on Feb. 2. The Federal Reserve is likely to keep raising rates as inflation proves hard to snuff out.

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