Inflation Slows But Not Enough for July Cut
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The Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) price index continued to slow in June 2024, drawing the Fed closer to confidence that inflation is on track towards the 2-percent target. Importantly, shelter costs, a major contributor to year-over-year inflation continue to slow. However, core services prices remain sticky and are slowing progress.

Real consumer spending weakened in the month providing slower momentum heading into the third quarter. Additionally, consumers are focusing services spending more on necessities than desires. Still, real spending tracked slightly above real after-tax income growth in June, and consumers continued to pile on debt to supplement incomes. The savings rate continued to fall as a result.

These factors, coupled with rising debt service, are stoking consumer credit delinquencies that may prove troublesome for the banking sector.

Trusted Insights For What’s Ahead™

  • The Fed should be pleased with much of the details of today’s report, but not enough to cut interest rates next week.
  • Consumer spending slowed at the end of Q2, suggesting possible cooling in domestic demand in the third quarter, which should help moderate inflation.
  • The Fed’s preferred inflation gauges also continued to edge lower, reflecting slower increases in shelter and some insurance costs, and falling durable goods prices.
  • Still the PCE deflator at 2.5 percent year-over-year is notably above the Fed’s 2-percent target, and progress is being stymied by core services costs amid sticky wages.
  • The Fed may also be concerned about the clear rotation in spending away from wants towards needs that are likely being financed with debt.
  • Taken together, the Fed must carefully calibrate the timing and extent of rate cuts: waiting too long could unduly stress consumers, but going too quickly could cause a resurgence of inflation, also harming consumers.

Report Highlights

PCE inflation continued to slow on a year-over-year basis. Total PCE inflation increased by 2.5 percent year-over year in June compared to 2.6 percent in May. Core inflation (i.e., total less food and energy) was unchanged at 2.6 percent year-over-year. Total inflation was up 0.1 percent month-over-month in June, and the core rose by 0.2 percent month-over-month.

Figure 1: Inflation heading in right direction, but core services slow progress to 2-percent target

 alt=

Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis and The Conference Board.

Goods prices are falling. Goods inflation was negative year-over-year for a second month as rising costs for nondurable goods like food and energy are more than being offset by falling prices for many durable goods. Motor vehicle and furniture prices were down month-over-month and year-over-year. Indeed, lower prices for autos and furniture might have boosted real goods spending in Q2, despite still elevated financing costs for big ticket items.

Figure 2. Rising nondurable goods prices being more than offset by falling durable goods prices

 alt=

Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis and The Conference Board.

Services still driving most inflation. Rising services costs continued to be the primary drivers of year-over-year inflation. The good news is that shelter, which comprises a large share of households’ consumption basket, is experiencing less aggressive increases in costs. Indeed, shelter cost inflation gauges, which include rents and imputed rents (i.e., what a homeowner would receive if she rented her house), are cooling consistent with past slowing in home prices and market rents. Additionally, insurance costs for motor vehicles and homes are not rising as aggressively, helping to offset still rapidly rising costs for health insurance and other types of financial services products. The bad news is that labor shortages, especially in front-line worker sectors, are keeping wages elevated, and thereby placing upward pressure on prices for other types of services.

Figure 3. Services largely fueling PCE inflation

 alt=

Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis and The Conference Board.

Figure 4. Past home price easing suggests further cooling in shelter costs

 alt=

Sources: S&P, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Bureau of Labor Statistics, and The Conference Board.

Figure 5. Insurance cost inflation starting to cool

 alt=

Sources: Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis and The Conference Board.

Real spending cools and rotates. Nominal consumer spending rose by 0.3 percent month-over-month in June after increasing by 0.4 percent in May. Real spending, which accounts for inflation, increased by 0.2 percent month-over-month in June compared to 0.4 percent in May. The slower pace of consumption reflected a slight decline in durable goods purchases after a surge in May. Still, looking at spending in recent months, consumers have dialed back their spending on services, and are spending more on services they need like housing and healthcare instead of wants.

Figure 6. Consumer spending slowed at the end of Q2 2024

 alt=

Sources: Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis and The Conference Board.

Incomes rising year-over-year. Personal income, in both real and nominal terms increased at a slower clip in June compared to May. Overall income rose by 0.2 percent in June versus 0.4 percent in May. Real income increased by just 0.1 percent in June after a 0.4 percent pop in May. Despite the slower month-on-month increases, personal income rose slightly faster year-over-year in June than in May. Real disposable personal income (i.e., personal income after paying taxes) also increased more slowly month-over-month, but faster year-over-year.

Debt is up and savings is down. Nonetheless, real spending growth is still tracking slightly above real after-tax income growth. As a result, the personal savings rate edged down to 3.4 percent in June from 3.5 percent in May. Consumers are still leveraging up to supplement incomes and paying higher interest costs as a consequence. Moreover, more consumers are falling behind on their consumer credit debt – raising costs for the financial institutions that issued the debt to them.

Figure 7. Consumption still tracking slightly above after-tax income

 alt=

Sources: Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis and The Conference Board.

Figure 8. Consumers are still piling on debt and accruing more interest on the debt

 alt=

Sources: Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis, Federal Reserve Board, and The Conference Board.

Figure 9: Consumer credit delinquencies on the rise

 alt=

Source: FRBNY Consumer Credit Panel/Equifax and The Conference Board.

Inflation Slows But Not Enough for July Cut

Inflation Slows But Not Enough for July Cut

26 Jul. 2024 | Comments (0)

The Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) price index continued to slow in June 2024, drawing the Fed closer to confidence that inflation is on track towards the 2-percent target. Importantly, shelter costs, a major contributor to year-over-year inflation continue to slow. However, core services prices remain sticky and are slowing progress.

Real consumer spending weakened in the month providing slower momentum heading into the third quarter. Additionally, consumers are focusing services spending more on necessities than desires. Still, real spending tracked slightly above real after-tax income growth in June, and consumers continued to pile on debt to supplement incomes. The savings rate continued to fall as a result.

These factors, coupled with rising debt service, are stoking consumer credit delinquencies that may prove troublesome for the banking sector.

Trusted Insights For What’s Ahead™

  • The Fed should be pleased with much of the details of today’s report, but not enough to cut interest rates next week.
  • Consumer spending slowed at the end of Q2, suggesting possible cooling in domestic demand in the third quarter, which should help moderate inflation.
  • The Fed’s preferred inflation gauges also continued to edge lower, reflecting slower increases in shelter and some insurance costs, and falling durable goods prices.
  • Still the PCE deflator at 2.5 percent year-over-year is notably above the Fed’s 2-percent target, and progress is being stymied by core services costs amid sticky wages.
  • The Fed may also be concerned about the clear rotation in spending away from wants towards needs that are likely being financed with debt.
  • Taken together, the Fed must carefully calibrate the timing and extent of rate cuts: waiting too long could unduly stress consumers, but going too quickly could cause a resurgence of inflation, also harming consumers.

Report Highlights

PCE inflation continued to slow on a year-over-year basis. Total PCE inflation increased by 2.5 percent year-over year in June compared to 2.6 percent in May. Core inflation (i.e., total less food and energy) was unchanged at 2.6 percent year-over-year. Total inflation was up 0.1 percent month-over-month in June, and the core rose by 0.2 percent month-over-month.

Figure 1: Inflation heading in right direction, but core services slow progress to 2-percent target

 alt=

Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis and The Conference Board.

Goods prices are falling. Goods inflation was negative year-over-year for a second month as rising costs for nondurable goods like food and energy are more than being offset by falling prices for many durable goods. Motor vehicle and furniture prices were down month-over-month and year-over-year. Indeed, lower prices for autos and furniture might have boosted real goods spending in Q2, despite still elevated financing costs for big ticket items.

Figure 2. Rising nondurable goods prices being more than offset by falling durable goods prices

 alt=

Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis and The Conference Board.

Services still driving most inflation. Rising services costs continued to be the primary drivers of year-over-year inflation. The good news is that shelter, which comprises a large share of households’ consumption basket, is experiencing less aggressive increases in costs. Indeed, shelter cost inflation gauges, which include rents and imputed rents (i.e., what a homeowner would receive if she rented her house), are cooling consistent with past slowing in home prices and market rents. Additionally, insurance costs for motor vehicles and homes are not rising as aggressively, helping to offset still rapidly rising costs for health insurance and other types of financial services products. The bad news is that labor shortages, especially in front-line worker sectors, are keeping wages elevated, and thereby placing upward pressure on prices for other types of services.

Figure 3. Services largely fueling PCE inflation

 alt=

Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis and The Conference Board.

Figure 4. Past home price easing suggests further cooling in shelter costs

 alt=

Sources: S&P, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Bureau of Labor Statistics, and The Conference Board.

Figure 5. Insurance cost inflation starting to cool

 alt=

Sources: Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis and The Conference Board.

Real spending cools and rotates. Nominal consumer spending rose by 0.3 percent month-over-month in June after increasing by 0.4 percent in May. Real spending, which accounts for inflation, increased by 0.2 percent month-over-month in June compared to 0.4 percent in May. The slower pace of consumption reflected a slight decline in durable goods purchases after a surge in May. Still, looking at spending in recent months, consumers have dialed back their spending on services, and are spending more on services they need like housing and healthcare instead of wants.

Figure 6. Consumer spending slowed at the end of Q2 2024

 alt=

Sources: Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis and The Conference Board.

Incomes rising year-over-year. Personal income, in both real and nominal terms increased at a slower clip in June compared to May. Overall income rose by 0.2 percent in June versus 0.4 percent in May. Real income increased by just 0.1 percent in June after a 0.4 percent pop in May. Despite the slower month-on-month increases, personal income rose slightly faster year-over-year in June than in May. Real disposable personal income (i.e., personal income after paying taxes) also increased more slowly month-over-month, but faster year-over-year.

Debt is up and savings is down. Nonetheless, real spending growth is still tracking slightly above real after-tax income growth. As a result, the personal savings rate edged down to 3.4 percent in June from 3.5 percent in May. Consumers are still leveraging up to supplement incomes and paying higher interest costs as a consequence. Moreover, more consumers are falling behind on their consumer credit debt – raising costs for the financial institutions that issued the debt to them.

Figure 7. Consumption still tracking slightly above after-tax income

 alt=

Sources: Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis and The Conference Board.

Figure 8. Consumers are still piling on debt and accruing more interest on the debt

 alt=

Sources: Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis, Federal Reserve Board, and The Conference Board.

Figure 9: Consumer credit delinquencies on the rise

 alt=

Source: FRBNY Consumer Credit Panel/Equifax and The Conference Board.

  • About the Author:Dana M. Peterson

    Dana M. Peterson

    Dana M. Peterson is the Chief Economist and Leader of the Economy, Strategy & Finance Center at The Conference Board. Prior to this, she served as a North America Economist and later as a Global E…

    Full Bio | More from Dana M. Peterson

     

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