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Inflation Guy’s CPI Summary (June 2024)

Let’s set the stage. Last month (May’s data), core CPI printed at +0.16% and +0.25% on Median. But a lot of that, most of it, was core goods and the question was whether that month was a one-off due to be reversed at some point, or if shelter and other slower-moving things would come along. Coming into this month, the economists’ consensus  was for +0.21% on core; the inflation swap market trades headline inflation but actually implied something a tiny bit softer than the economists were expecting. We knew Used Cars was going to be weak again, but it seemed like people were all-in on the idea that the worm has turned and now inflation is going to head sharply lower.

Whether this turns out to be true or not, it’s important to realize that the reason economists think that is because unemployment is rising, indicating that we are either in or very near a recession, and economists think (against logic and data) that wages lead prices so this should herald a disinflationary pulse. Now, I also think inflation is headed lower, but it’s because shelter is coming off the boil and not because the Fed successfully cracked the backs of labor.

So what happened this month?

We saw a very weak headline number of -0.06%, which was mainly the fault of a very weak core inflation number of +0.06%. That’s the second quite weak core figure in a row, and when median CPI comes out later today it should be even weaker than last month, at +0.195% or so. If we could repeat that median every month, it would be tantamount to inflation being at the Fed’s target because median normally tracks a little higher than core except when we are in an inflationary upswing.

But whereas last month’s inflation figure was all about core goods, this month we finally saw a bit of a deceleration in shelter. Okay, yes – core goods slipped further into deflation, because that category exists mainly to make me look stupid by going lower and lower when I keep thinking the disinflation must be nearly wrung out. Core Services dropped to 5.1% y/y from 5.3% y/y.

We had known Used Cars would be weak, and it was at -1.5% m/m. New cars also dragged. But I will say it again because I want to have the chance to appear stupid again next month: goods deflation is running its course. Global shipping costs are rising again, the dollar will be vulnerable if the Fed begins to ease, and while used cars should continue to show large y/y declines for the next few months that’s mostly base effects. On an index level, the used cars price index is almost all the way back to the overall price level. Since COVID, the general price level – what has happened to the average price of goods and services – is up 22.3%. Used Car prices are now only up 27.7%. Not all goods and services will move up exactly 22.3%; the point is that the dislocation in used cars is pretty much over and therefore we should expect at some point that used car inflation will start to look more like overall inflation.

But again, goods aren’t the story we really care about. The question is, what about services? The news here is all non-bad. (Some of it is good, some is just not bad.) This month, the story is that rents abruptly weakened on a m/m basis. Primary Rents were +0.26% m/m (was +0.39% last month), and Owners’ Equivalent Rent was +0.28% (was +0.43% last month). This dropped the y/y rates to 5.07% and 5.45%, respectively.

That’s good news, but it is not unexpected news. The conundrum over the last 3-6 months has been why this wasn’t already happening. On a m/m basis, the rent numbers probably won’t get a lot better, but if they print around this level consistently then the y/y rent numbers will decelerate gradually. Unfortunately, there is no sign of deflation in rents and they are likely to begin to reaccelerate later this year, or early next year. That is an out-of-consensus view, though, and you should keep in mind that the Fed believes we have imminent deflation in rents.

In addition to the softer rents numbers, Lodging Away from Home showed -2% m/m. However, like airfares (-5% m/m), LAFH is not something that is going to be a persistent large drag. It’s volatile. On airfares, this decline in prices matches nicely with the energy figures we saw yesterday that showed a surprising fall in jet fuel inventories. Prices dropped and people flew!

Moving on to “Supercore.” People made a lot last month of the m/m decline in core services ex-shelter, and they’ll make a lot of the fact that it declined m/m again this month. But that looks like a seasonal issue: last year the two softest months were also May and June. On a y/y basis, supercore showed another slight decline. Medical Care Services is 3.3% y/y, with Physicians’ and Hospital Services both holding pretty steady at a high level. I don’t see any major improvement in supercore yet.

Overall, there’s no doubting that this number is soothing for the Fed. It’s soothing for me too. Inflation is decelerating, and as I said last month I think the Fed will almost certainly deliver a token ease in the next couple of months.

The potential issue is that inflation isn’t slowing for the reason the Fed thinks it is. The economy is slowing, and unemployment is rising. I don’t know when Sahm first said it, but for decades I’ve been noting that when the Unemployment Rate rises at least 0.5% from its low, it always rises at least 1% more (here’s a time when I said it in 2011: https://inflationguy.blog/2011/07/10/no-mister-bond-i-expect-you-to-die/ ). Not that I’m bitter that it’s called the “Sahm Rule” now.

So yes, the economy is weakening and the labor market is softening. And that presages a deceleration in wage growth – or, really, a continuation in that deceleration. But the connection between wages and prices is loose at best, and that’s not why inflation will stay low, if it does. In fact, I continue to believe that median inflation will end up settling in the high 3s, low 4s. There has always been an ‘unless’ clause to that belief, but it isn’t ‘unless we enter recession.’ We will enter into one, and probably already are, but recessions and decelerations in core inflation are also only a loose relationship at best. It isn’t the recession which is causing disinflation (after all, the disinflation started long before now). What may is the slow growth in the money supply, combined with the rebound in velocity eventually running its course. We are closer to the end of the velocity rebound than to the beginning, and while M2 is accelerating it isn’t problematic yet. Those are the nascent trends to watch closely.

In the meantime – the Fed has what it wants for now. Soft employment and softening inflation. An ease will follow shortly. Whether that is followed by further eases remains to be seen, but…for now…the trends are favorable for the central bank.

Inflation Deceleration Continues – But Not Enough

June 18, 2024 3 comments

[A version of this article first appeared in last month’s Quarterly Inflation Outlook, available at https://inflationguy.blog/shop/]

Core and Median inflation continue to decline. This is not really a surprise; since early 2023 the clear direction has been to lower inflation. The debate has not been about whether inflation was heading higher or lower. The debate has been about whether the downtrend was going to converge on 2% as the Fed’s target, or fall short of that level. For at least that long, my position has been that median inflation would settle in the “high 3s/low 4s.” To date, nothing has happened to change that view.

In fact, it cannot escape notice that inflation has been coming down a lot more slowly than it went up. When the initial spike happened, certainly the ‘transitory’ crowd expected inflation would fall at least as rapidly as it went up, and even many of those who correctly understood that the underlying dynamics were not accidents of fate but the results of terrible policy thought that the return round-trip would take roughly the same amount of time as the outbound leg. But that hasn’t happened. The softening of inflation has been more reluctant than was the upward thrust. This is partly because, since the initial move in prices was not transitory, it kicked off a feedback loop: so wages went up to reflect the pressures that workers were feeling, and that fed back into inflation.

For Median CPI, the sharp acceleration took off from August 2021 at 2.4% and extended 18 months until it reached 7.1% in February 2023. In the 15 months since then, median has declined only to 4.3%, and this rate of improvement appears to be flattening out rather than accelerating.

On Core CPI, the difference has been more striking. The jump from 1.6% y/y to 6.5% y/y took 12 months, from March 2021 to March 2022. Since the actual 6.6% high in September 2022, we have had 20 months of declining inflation and core is only back to 3.4%.

The optimistic view is that we have had more months of decelerating inflation than we had of accelerating inflation. The more realistic view, especially considering that Median CPI hadn’t been above 3.33% for 28 years prior to COVID (and Core, not above 3.1%) is that inflation is converging to the mean…but to a different mean. This is what I have argued (for a long time) was happening: the perturbation to the former equilibrium displaced the whole distribution to a new equilibrium (“high 3s, low 4s”). We are now getting data that seems to support this notion.

One important characteristic of mean-reverting series is that the amount of mean-reversion “pressure” is related to the distance of the current point from the mean. That is, when inflation is far away from the mean, it tends to revert more quickly and when it is closer to the mean the pressure to converge is less. The general form of a mean-reverting series1 is:

In this equation, the economic variable is represented by the time series S, the long-term mean is μ, and the mean reversion rate is k.2 Because there is also random noise, and because many economic series don’t tend to see large perturbations on a regular basis, it is not a trivial thing to pick out the long-term mean and the reversion coefficient from the noise. But the point is that such series, when they are strongly perturbed, initially spring back rapidly but then gradually slow how much they are rebounding, until they approach the mean. That certainly looks like what we have here. The chart below shows core and median CPI, but from the point of the shock to new highs I have added ‘mean reversion lines’ where the long-term mean is taken to be 4% for Median CPI and 3.5% for Core CPI, and the mean reversion coefficient is taken to be 0.12 in each case.3

There are lots of different combinations that can produce plausible dynamics, and my point isn’t to claim that these are the right parameters. I am merely trying to illustrate that the recent behavior looks like a series that is mean reverting to new, higher means.

(For what it’s worth, if you want to see why most economists last year thought that we would be back at target inflation in late 2023/early 2024, use 2% for μ. In that case, inflation starts down much more steeply than we actually saw, and doesn’t flatten out until lower levels of inflation.)

Why is the rate of improvement slowing? It is slowing because the easiest improvements have already happened. For example, core goods inflation has declined from over 12% to -1.7% y/y. That’s great news – but the first 14% of disinflation is surely the easiest! Other, stickier parts of the CPI, such as shelter and ‘supercore’, are coming down more slowly (shelter) or not at all (supercore, which is at the same level it first reached in March 2022). In the conventional view, this is “improvement that is waiting to happen.” But if overall core/median inflation is converging to a higher mean, then these improvements will be mostly offset by an increase in core goods inflation from -1.7% to, say, 0%.

The road gets harder from here, and that’s what the decelerating deceleration is telling us!



  1. I’ve excised the complicated-looking, but irrelevant for this discussion, symbology for the noise term so as not to perturb readers too far from their means. ↩︎
  2. Worth pointing out, since I have used the ‘spring’ analogy to explain the behavior of money velocity, is that the ‘pressure’ part of this equation is identical to the physics of a spring, where F=-kx and x is displacement. ↩︎
  3. Actually, I’ve also removed the recursion – that is, the dotted line isn’t based on the most-recent S, but on the starting S and then thereafter on the calculated S. It would be what your mean-reversion-inspired forecast would look like, from the initial point. ↩︎

Inflation Guy’s CPI Summary (May 2024)

June 12, 2024 3 comments

The CPI report for May was definitely good news. In April, core CPI was +0.29% and Median CPI was +0.35%; this month those figures were +0.16% for core and +0.25% (est) for median. That would be the best median CPI print since last summer and this was the best m/m core CPI print since 2021.

Core goods decelerated to -1.7% from -1.3%, y/y. I have long admonished that we are running out of room for deceleration in inflation to be driven by core goods as it’s hard to imagine goods deflation of a couple percent continuing for very long. Yet, so far, that is what we have gotten! Core services, meanwhile, was steady at +5.3% y/y.

But while there’s optimism in some quarters that we have seen the light at the end of the tunnel, this data was not unequivocally good news. The disinflation going forward cannot be all about goods, but in this report it mostly was. New car prices declined (although Used Car prices rose). Apparel declined, with some of the largest m/m declines in the CPI this month for its subcategories. Durable goods declined, and ‘education and communication commodities’ (things like computers, software and accessories, telephone hardware, etc) was a measurable drag. Those are all good things, but while Bullard today was talking about ‘immaculate disinflation’ (which is an idiotic term) there wasn’t really any sign of broad immaculateness. It was mostly in core goods.

 As I mentioned, core services was steady year over year. But medical care – both goods and services, actually – both accelerated. I have been watching hospital services, within medical care, and it actually decelerated (7.2% y/y from 7.7%, chart below). Yay! On the other hand, the long-suffering Doctors’ Services accelerated to 1.4% y/y from 0.9%, and Medicinal Drugs rose to 3.4% from 2.6%. Boo. The +1.3% m/m rise in Medical Care Commodities was actually one of the month’s biggest gainers in the CPI.

Airfares dropped -3.6% m/m! And motor vehicle insurance -0.25% in a welcome respite. And car/truck rental -1.2% m/m. Thus “supercore”, which is core services ex-housing, actually declined m/m for the first time in a very long time even with medical care services going up, and the y/y number took a very small deceleration on the following chart.

That is welcome news, to be sure. But if goods prices were down and core services ex-housing were down (collectively), then obviously the fact that the overall inflation number was positive means rents are still percolating. Primary rents rose +0.39% m/m, and Owners’ Equivalent Rent rose +0.43% m/m. Those are both accelerations compared to the prior month, which is not expected! Y/Y, the numbers are still slowing, but not as fast as anyone would like.

This has led some people this morning to say that inflation right now is still ‘all about rents,’ and dismiss the 40% of the consumption basket that ensures people don’t get wet when it rains. What’s funny about that is that a few months ago, economists were pointing to rents as being the main reason to be optimistic about inflation because it would soon be in deflation! Remember?

Rents are decelerating y/y, but they’re not even decelerating as fast as I thought they would (and I was on the side of ‘they’ll go down a lot slower than you think, and not as far’).

The optimist here will say that the part we don’t have a long lead time to forecast – core goods and to some extent core services ex-rents – are looking good and ‘we know’ that rents will get better so ring the bell, the Fed’s job is basically done. That would be valid, if there was reason to think that core goods would continue to contribute the deflation that we have seen recently while rents continue to decelerate. But rents are sticky, and goods are not. To that point, consider the story of Wal-Mart, which announced last week that they will be replacing paper shelf labels with electronic labels over the next couple of years. You don’t do that to make it easier to lower prices. https://finance.yahoo.com/news/walmart-replace-paper-shelf-labels-221637323.html Typically, sellers try to raise prices quickly and lower them slowly. If you think goods prices are going to go back to the old regime of basically flat, with a small downward tilt, you’d keep using a slow pricing gun.

On the goods side, we also have to deal with the rising tide of global protectionism over the last few years (see picture, source Global Trade Alert), and the mass immigration to the US which puts pressure on demand long before the new source of labor contributes to supply (as with: housing). So far, a dollar which has generally risen over the last decade has helped to blunt those effects. But that won’t be the case forever.

The bottom line is that while this is a good CPI report – in some ways, one of the best reports we have had in some time – it is not an unvarnished positive. The failure of rents to decelerate according to plan, and the stickiness of wages so far at a fairly high level, is the underlying story. Goods and airfares are what painted the pretty picture this month. But if the picture keeps getting pretty over the balance of this year, it will be using paints from a different palette. I continue to expect housing costs to decelerate some (before re-accelerating), but I am not sanguine that goods and airfares will continue to drop at the pace which made today’s report so pleasant. Indeed, I expect that next month some of these categories will likely have some give-back so unless rents start to drop faster we could have a surprise in the other direction.

Naturally, as I always admonish, it is wise to not make major investing decisions based on one data point. One month’s figure should never cause you to change your medium-term forecast, unless it represents an accumulation of data that causes you to reject your prior hypothesis. This data point does not do that, since after all it is really the first really positive data point we have had in a while. I continue to expect median inflation to settle in the high 3s, low 4s. And as I said in our Quarterly, and in the podcast recently, I think that while the FOMC has no real reason to ease they likely will lower rates a token amount, at least once over the next few months prior to the Presidential election.

Inflation Guy’s CPI Summary (Apr 2024)

May 15, 2024 8 comments

The CPI for April came in pretty close to expectations. CPI came in at 0.31% m/m, and 0.29% on core, versus a priori expectations for 0.37% and 0.30%. This relative accuracy does not necessarily mean that economists now know exactly what is going on in this index, only that all of the misses canceled out. But the misses are interesting, and worth looking at, and we will do that here. Ultimately, reports like this mostly create an opportunity for framing the debate on whichever side you are on. But to my mind, this report does not meaningfully move the ball towards ‘price stability’ and leaves the Fed – if they’re being honest – still in a bind between slowing growth and sticky inflation.

Not all parts of the CPI were sticky, and that’s the point here. Actually, that has been the point for quite a while, but it was very stark in today’s report. Here’s the distribution of y/y changes in bottom-level components in the CPI. Today, the left hand stuff got lefter, the right-hand stuff got a little righter, and the middle stuff stayed about the same.

I don’t usually lead with the distribution, but it is important to keep this in mind. Inflation is not, especially at lowish levels (say, less than 5-8%), a smooth process. I used to liken this to the process of popcorn popping in a bag; the bag inflates but not because all of the kernels popped at once. The good news is that the popping is slowing, as the Fed has removed some of the heat from the bag, but the pops are still happening.

Now, here’s the good news. Thanks to core CPI being on target, the 3-month, 6-month, 9-month (well, never mind that one), and 12-month averages all decelerated.

Median inflation won’t be out for a couple of hours, but my estimate this month is 0.348% m/m, essentially unchanged from last month. That’s sort of the bad news – the y/y median CPI should be stable this month at 4.5%.

So, I think the bold type for the top line is this: inflation is decelerating, but slowly, and in a sticky fashion. The markets loved that answer and stocks and bonds leapt on the report. But that’s all framing. The debate coming into today was never about whether inflation was declining – it has been, for a while, and is expected to (even by me, and I’m on the high side of Street expectations by a fair amount) until at least Q3 and probably into Q4. That wasn’t the question – we have known since the middle of last year that 2024 would see decelerating inflation. The question is whether the deceleration will continue after that, and whether it is decelerating to 3.75%-4.25% or 1.75%-2.25%. There is as yet no sign of the latter and all signs still point to the former, because the sticky stuff is not yet unstuck.

And that continues to boil down to this: deceleration is still being driven by core goods, and resistance to that deceleration by core services.

Core goods fell to -1.3% y/y this month. I have been saying that we’ve squeezed about all we can out of core goods, and then it drops from -0.7% to -1.3%, the lowest y/y figure in 20 years! This happened even though Apparel rose 1.2% m/m. As usual, the main culprits were autos with Used Cars -1.38% m/m after -1.11% last month, and New Cars -0.45% m/m. Ironically, I think the continued softness in autos is due partly to the continued rise in motor vehicle insurance costs (which were +1.4% m/m again). We hear a lot about the affordability of housing, but you gotta have housing. You don’t gotta update your car.

The softness in core goods is welcome, naturally, but that’s the volatile part of CPI. And such low levels are only sustainable if the dollar continues to strengthen.

On the other hand, core services only softened to 5.3% y/y from 5.4%. A lot of that is housing, with OER +0.42% m/m (was +0.44% last month) and Primary Rents slowing to 0.35% from 0.41%. But outside that, ‘super core’ (core services less rent of shelter) is actually still bouncing higher. It’s 4.91% y/y – below the 6.5% it got to in late 2022, but well above the lows from October (3.75%).

Some people will like the fact that the m/m Supercore was “only” 0.42% or so, which is down from recent months. But that’s a little deceiving. Airfares were -0.81% m/m, car/truck rental -4.6%, and the monthly health insurance bump has run its course and is back to a more normal m/m change (positive, but at a 3.5% annualized rate). Longer-term, we still have to worry about the continued acceleration in, say, hospital services, which is +7.7% y/y. I pointed this out last month, and the picture is no prettier this month.

One other comment/update on rents. It is proceeding according to expectations, although I expect a slightly faster rate of deceleration for the next quarter or so. But then, all the signs are that rents are going to re-accelerate. Even those terrible indicators that inflation dummies (this includes Yellen and most of the Fed) relied on to forecast that rents would be in deflation this year…even those indicators are showing a bounce to come. Home prices are accelerating again. And none of this is surprising given that landlords are facing higher costs and increasing demand (6 million immigrants need roofs). And this is why the inflation dummies are inflation dummies – there was never, never, a good argument for why rents should be in free fall, if you just spent 10 minutes talking to an actual landlord. Get your heads out of your models and look around occasionally, dummies.

Okay, so that was a little strident but I am getting a little tired of asking potential clients how they are addressing inflation and hearing them tell me about their economist. Inflation hedging ≠ economists. Come on, people.

Let’s take this around to what we care about, and that’s policy. The Administration is trying to help the inflation figures by delaying the refilling of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve if prices go up, but is also implementing new tariffs on Chinese goods. That answers the first WWJD question (what will Joe do) – in an election year, actions which cause inflation next year are fine…just not anything which causes inflation this year. The other WWJD question (what will Jerome do) is still interesting. Growth is indeed slowing, and has been slowing for some time. Consumers are looking a bit tired, and unemployment is rising slowly. But inflation is not behaving. Median inflation won’t get below 4% until September at the earliest, and even optimistically won’t get to 3% before it starts to bounce. Before, the Fed could pretend that the new rent indicators showing widespread deflation gave it some latitude to move before the rent decreases actually arrived, but that isn’t a plausible argument any more.

However, the FOMC has started to lean more dovish. The significant decrease in the rate of taper that was announced at the last meeting clearly shows which way they are leaning. The case for a rate cut later in the summer (absent some financial crack-up that needs to be addressed) would be based on the Committee members’ sense that the current policy rate is above neutral and can be moved back towards neutral as the risks become ‘more balanced.’ Additionally, doves could argue that they don’t want to be seen easing right before the election so an ease at the end of July is a ‘down payment’ on looser policy later. The inflation data don’t support that, but the Fed doesn’t care only about inflation data. If I was on the Committee, I would not vote to loosen the taper or lower rates, but I would not be surprised to see a token ease at the end-of-July meeting. It would be cavalier, and possibly political, and not supported by the data we currently have in hand…but it wouldn’t surprise me.

One final administrative notice to those of you who subscribe to the Quarterly Inflation Outlook. The Q2 issue is expected to be published this Sunday, so look for it! (And subscribe, if you haven’t).

Inflation Guy’s CPI Summary (Mar 2024)

April 10, 2024 7 comments

After a week when the NY/NJ area saw an earthquake, an eclipse, and a gorgeous 75-degree spring day, it is time to get back to work.

Today’s CPI report was not expected to be particularly great. In fact, one of the biggest conundrums of market behavior recently has been the question of why investors seemed to remain very confident that the Fed will cut rates several times this year, even as forecasts for the path of inflation have backed off of what they were last year (when most forecasters had core CPI returning placidly and obediently to the neighborhood of 2% this year). The a priori consensus forecasts for today’s CPI figure were +0.28% m/m on core and +0.33% m/m on headline. The Kalshi market was in line with that, although CPI swaps were a touch lower on headline at +0.29% (seasonally adjusted, but CPI swaps trade NSA CPI). That’s not wonderful: 0.28% on core would annualize to 3.4% y/y.

The assumption has been that even if in March we are annualizing to 3.4%, the coming deceleration in rents will push everything back down to where it needs to be. The problem with this has always been (a) the strongly-held belief that rents would slip into deflation this year were never based on good analysis, and more importantly (b) this assumed that nothing unforeseen would happen in the other direction. It is characteristic of inflationary periods, of course, that bad things happen on the upside. So this was always sort of assuming a can opener,[1] but at least forecasts for the current data were reflecting that these things had not happened yet. To be fair, the consensus on core has been low relative to the actual print for four months in a row, but at least folks are forecasting mid-3s, rather than 2.0.

Now, let’s review one other thing before we look at some charts. The recent story boils down to this: sticky rents, sticky wages. While core goods has been pulling down core inflation, that game was running out of room. The next part of core deceleration relies on un-sticking the sticky rents, and sticky wages.

So here we are. Today’s figure +0.36% on core CPI, +0.38% on headline (seasonally adjusted on both). This makes the last 3 core CPIs 0.39%, 0.36%, and 0.36%. The chart below of the m/m core CPI figures does not really give the impression of a decelerating trend.

We always look these days first at rents, because that is so important to the disinflation story. Rent of Primary Residence was +0.41% m/m, down from 0.46% last month. Owners’ Equivalent Rent was steady, at +0.44%. Remember that there had been some alarm two months ago, when OER for January jumped to 0.56%, that this was due to a new survey method or coverage and it was going to be repeated going forward. That was always pretty unlikely, but now we have had two months basically back at the old level and the January figure appears to be an outlier. 0.41% on Primary and 0.44% on OER is not hot, just sticky. It isn’t going up; it’s just not going down very fast.

Rents will continue to decline. But the failure of rents to slip into deflation is a source…maybe the source…of the big forecast error made by economists about 2024 CPI. Our cost-based model for primary rents, which never got even vaguely close to deflation, has now definitively hooked higher with the low coming in November. Rents haven’t been decelerating as fast as our model had them, but if anything that’s a source for concern on the high side.

Outside of rents, core inflation ex-housing rose to 2.38% y/y. That sounds like “most of the economy is on target,” but that’s not how inflation works. There’s a distribution, and if the ‘rents’ part of the distribution is going to be higher than the target then everything else needs to average something below the target. We aren’t there. And, as I noted above, we’ve squeezed out just about everything we can from core goods. Actually, y/y core goods dropped to -0.7% thanks partly to continued declines in Used Cars (-1.1% m/m) and some decline this month in New Cars (-0.2%). I think the latter might partially reflect discounts on the EV part of the fleet, where cars for sale have been piling up as manufacturers under political pressure have been producing far more of them than people want.

Note that core services, even with the decline in y/y rents, moved higher this month to 5.4% from 5.2% y/y. Some of that was medical care, which was +0.49% m/m driven by another jump (+0.98% m/m) in Hospital Services. The y/y rise in Hospital Services is now up to 7.55% – the highest since October 2010.

Partly driven by hospital services, the ‘super core’ (core services ex-rents) continues to re-accelerate.

Again, this is not what the Fed wanted to see; and it’s driven partly by the stickiness in wages. The Atlanta Fed’s Wage Growth Tracker has decelerated but is still at 5.0% y/y. That’s not the stuff that 2% core inflation is made of.

Let’s take one moment to look at a piece of good news from the report. My estimate of median CPI, which is my forecast variable because it is not subject to outliers like Core CPI, is +0.32% for this month. Because I have to estimate seasonals for the regional housing numbers, actual Median might be a teensy bit higher or lower but in any event the chart of Median CPI is much less alarming than the chart of Core CPI.

I should observe that the news there is not completely good, since a signature of inflationary environments is that tails are to the upside – that is, core is persistently above median. That was true during the upswing, but during the moderation core has gone back below median. But this bears watching, and if core starts to routinely print above median it will be a negative sign. For now, though, the Median CPI is good news. Relatively.

So let’s talk policy.

The Administration always seems to be confused about why, despite strong jobs numbers, consumers consistently report dissatisfaction with the economic situation. There really shouldn’t be any confusion. Consumers, especially those not in the upper classes, hate taxes. And in addition to a high direct take from the government in explicit taxes, consumers are also facing persistent inflation that the Administration says isn’t there. Inflation is a tax, and it sucks worse than direct taxation because you can’t rearrange your consumption very well to avoid it. (You can rearrange your investment portfolio, but a strikingly small number of people seem to have actually done that even three years into this inflation episode. If you’re curious about how, you really should visit Enduring Investments and ask.)

On the other question of policy, and that’s the Fed: I can’t see any rational argument for cutting rates in June. Actually, on the data we have in hand I can’t see an argument for cutting rates in 2024, except for the one the Fed doesn’t consider and that’s that interest rates don’t affect inflation. To cut the overnight rate, the Fed would have to rely on forecasts that inflation is going to get better. And to do that now, when forecasts have been persistently wrong (and not by just a little bit but about the whole trajectory) since 2020, would be incredibly cavalier. The FOMC still consists of human beings, so never say never. And the inflation data should improve as the year goes along and rents moderate. I just don’t see any sign that it’s going to moderate enough to say ‘we’ve reached price stability.’ Sticky in the high-3s, low-4s is still where I think we’re coming out of this.


[1] A physicist, an engineer, and an economist are stranded on the desert island with nothing but a crate of canned food. “How are we going to get the food that is inside of these cans?” asked one. The physicist says “well, we could heat the cans, carefully, in a crucible we make from ocean clays. Eventually the heat will cause the can to burst and we can get the food inside.” The engineer says “that will take too long. What we need to do is take some of these coconuts, raise them up to a great height with a series of ropes I will design, and allow them to smash down onto the cans, breaking them open.” The economist says “I have a solution that is far easier than what you fellows are doing. Here is how we do this. First, assume a can opener….”

Inflation Guy’s CPI Summary (Feb 2024)

March 12, 2024 4 comments

I must say that I didn’t see this one coming. Credit where credit is due, though: while Street economists were just a little low (consensus was +0.40% headline, +0.30% core), the CPI swap market at least got headline right (there being no market for core inflation CPI swaps) by pricing in +0.47%, seasonally adjusted. The actual print was +0.44% on headline CPI, and a lusty +0.36% on core. I was lower, even though I got the big pieces right. I had some tails going the wrong way. Let’s get into it.

The things which threw me were airfares and used cars. Based on declines in jet fuel, I had anticipated that airfares would be roughly -6% m/m, and I merely got the sign wrong as they were +6.6%. Jet fuel was tighter on the east coast, and I suspect regional differences there is what caused this wide divergence. If I’m right, then airfares will underperform jet fuel over the next few months. If, instead, it’s a cost-of-labor or cost-of-equipment thing, or if it’s increased pricing power from airlines because of capacity constraints, then airfares won’t drop back and that would be a bad sign.

Similarly, Used Cars continues to outperform the Black Book survey. I had penciled in -1%, and Kalshi markets were around -1.5%, but Used Car CPI came in +0.5%. This is a volatile series, and this miss is only interesting because Used Cars keeps missing a little high compared to the Black Book survey. That could be an issue of sample mix, but I’m not sure. New Cars were -0.10% m/m. Car and Truck Rental was +3.83% after -0.74% last month, so that’s another upper tail. Overall, core goods was steady at -0.3% y/y.

I said I got the big pieces right. I refer to rents. Remember that last month we had a large deviation between Owners’ Equivalent Rent (OER) and Rent of Primary Residence. Normally, these two track pretty closely, but occasionally they deviate and last month OER was 0.2% higher than Primary Rents. That contributed to the very high median CPI in January, and there was a ton of discussion about whether the BLS had done something weird with the survey – they had, in January 2023, refined the OER weighting method and there was concern that this was a ‘mix’ problem that was going to continue to push OER higher than Primary Rents for a while. The BLS contributed to this sense of confusion by sending out a blast email which seemed to suggest it was so; they had to walk that back and to their credit did a very nice webinar and has spent a lot of time this month explaining in excruciating detail how the OER survey is conducted. Bottom line: there’s nothing to see here; sometimes the two series diverge slightly. Moreover, as I’ve pointed out previously, when natural gas prices are declining it tends to mean that the cost of imputed utilities is declining which, since they’re deducted from the rental survey used for OER means OER should be slightly higher than Primary Rents over time. Not 0.2% per month, though, and I expected this aberration would mostly close this month.

It did, with OER +0.44% m/m (was +0.56% last month) and Primary Rents +0.46% m/m (was +0.36% last month). Year over year, they’re about the same but OER has moved slightly above Primary.

So the surprising part to me was that Primary came up some to help close that gap, not that the gap closed. I continue to expect rents to decelerate, along with everyone else – only, as I will keep saying until I am blue in the face, we are not going to go into rent deflation as so many people have been forecasting (folks seem to be backing off that now!) but rather we should drop into the 2%-3% range y/y before rebounding later this year.

There seems to be evidence of that in the independent rent measures. Below is a chart from a recent Redfin news release. It bears noting, of course, that these rent measures also all went into deflation and misled all of those economists who lean on these high-frequency-but-low-quality data. (Having said that, Redfin does seem to be better than some others, but it’s still measuring something different than what the CPI is measuring).

Now, the story starts to become a little clearer, albeit concerning. Core services rose to 5.4% y/y from 5.2% y/y, while core goods was unchanged as I noted above. Rents are coming down, but outside of rents we are seeing some stabilization at higher-than-pre-COVID levels. The chart below shows Shelter CPI, and Core CPI ex-Shelter, which has been roughly stable for three months around 2.25%. That sounds great, since 2.25% on CPI is roughly equivalent to 2% on the Fed’s PCE target…except that 2.25% is higher than it was pre-COVID. The theme, and we’re seeing it in several places, is inflation being sticky at higher levels than it was pre-crisis.

There were some good parts to the report – notably Food, which was tame m/m for both Food at Home (-0.03% m/m versus +0.37% last month) and Food Away from Home (+0.10%, was +0.47%), although the latter is probably not sustainable given rapidly-rising wages. Still, it’s positive. Unless you’re buying baby food, which is +9.2% y/y!

Actually, babies got a lot more expensive this month. The largest increase in the categories used for Median CPI was Infant/Toddler Apparel. In general, apparel categories were right-tail items this month. But there were not enough of them to explain the high core CPI. Median was +0.39% (my estimate); since that’s right in line with core it says the tails weren’t what moved this number. It’s just that this month, inflation rose at something like a 4.25%-4.75% annualized pace.

With this, and with Core Services ex-shelter (“Supercore”) at +0.47% m/m – which means supercore accelerated to +4.3% y/y – it is inconceivable that the Fed will yet consider cutting rates. It is possible that they may later in the year, but there is far too much exuberance in the bond market about that prospect.

Indeed, there’s far too much exuberance generally. Stocks rose on an inflation report showing that inflation was higher than expected. I’m not saying that equities should crash on this data, but that’s the sort of reaction that you tend to see in bubbles. The market will be semi reserved going into an economic report, but then rallies afterwards regardless of the data. I have seen that sort of environment, where such a thing happened regularly, a couple of times in my career and they never ended well. To jump on this data, as if it was in any way positive, says that people were just waiting until after the number to buy, and they were going to buy no matter what. That’s not a healthy market, especially when that happens at high prices rather than low prices.

I continue to expect median inflation to decline to the high-3s, low-4s, maybe dipping a little lower than that in Q3 if rents bottom then as I expect. The bottom line is that we’re near levels where I have been expecting inflation to get sticky, and it seems to be happening. I didn’t see this particular month being sticky, but the general tenor of the data makes sense to me.

Inflation Guy’s CPI Summary (Jan 2024)

February 13, 2024 5 comments

This is the reason that serious people don’t choose a trend length that happens to fit with their narrative. For the last few months, supposedly-serious economists have crowed about how the 3-month average of seasonally-adjusted CPI was at a new post-COVID low. (Most of those same economists, only a few months ago, were focused on the 6-month average, but when that started crawling higher they switched to the 3-month average.) And indeed, it was exciting. Headline CPI was down to 1.89% on a seasonally-adjusted-three-month-average; core CPI was at 3.30%. Victory over inflation was proclaimed! Inflation was back at target, even a bit below, so the Fed should start easing policy forthwith.

Fortunately, and maybe surprisingly, Chairman Powell is built of stronger stuff.

As a ‘Cliff’s Notes’ guide to what you’re going to read: all of those folks who loved the 3-month average when it was 1.89%, aren’t going to be as vocal about it now that it’s at 2.80%. Core, on a 3-month average basis, is at 3.92%. The 6-month averages also rose.

Now, this doesn’t mean that inflation is necessarily headed back higher yet. I’ll get to that in a bit, but I will allow as how the picture of m/m core CPI, below, might be perceived by some as discouraging.

Prior to this figure, consensus was for a fairly strong report, 0.16% on headline and 0.28% on core. I thought it would be softer, because rents on the basis of my model should start to decelerate soon. But, as I said in my podcast, if rents were high then you should look past rents. They’re going to decelerate over the next 6 months or so, to around 3% y/y, and then re-accelerate. That’s all baked in the cake, and it will flatter the inflation data. But it hasn’t happened yet! OER was a massive +0.56% m/m. Primary Rents were more in line with what I was looking for, with a small deceleration to +0.36% m/m from +0.39% last month. The indices are still decelerating…just not as rapidly as I think anyone (myself included now!) expected.

Lodging Away from Home was +1.78%, which was a big m/m figure and contributed to the overall housing subindex being +0.62% m/m at a time when shelter should be decelerating.

But as I said, if this surprise was all OER then we can look past it.

Core Goods was weak, which was a downside surprise. Used Cars fell -3.37% m/m, which is far worse than any surveys saw this month…but as I pointed out last month, Used Cars had been surprisingly strong compared to the private surveys so this is partly a make-up and it contributed to the weakness in Core Goods.

Medicinal Drugs was also weak, -0.54% m/m, and that’s also in Core Goods. Overall, Core Goods – which had shown some signs of life – dropped back to deflation y/y this month.

Going forward, I don’t think core goods will stay in deflation. Partly, that’s because supply chains are being stressed again due to drought in the Panama Canal and the effective shutting of the Red Sea to container traffic, but it’s also partly because there is continued interest in ‘nearshoring’ which will raise costs (after all, it was to lower costs that firms offshored stuff in the first place. And then there’s also this, for the medium term. To be sure, this level of growth in Personal Consumption in the past was consistent with mild deflation – but that was pre-nearshoring. The direction is what I’m interested in, but I also think that for a given amount of PCE growth, we will see more core goods inflation in the future.

So now we turn to the really interesting part of the report, and that’s core services ex-shelter. I’ve been saying for a while that this category was going to be a sticky wicket because wages are still rising at a 5% y/y pace. And indeed, the wicket is sticky. This month, airfares rose +1.4% (this may have been related to jet fuel tightness on the east coast), but also again we saw a continued acceleration to Hospital Services, which rose to the highest y/y rate (+6.7%) since 2011.

Overall, core services ex-shelter (so-called “Supercore”) rose +0.85% m/m, the biggest rise in a couple of years, and the y/y measure is in an upswing.

Overall, this report is deflating…pun absolutely, 100% intended…for those who thought that inflation is settling gently back to target and that the Fed therefore can lower interest rates back to where we have a God-Given Right to have them, 2% or so. Not so fast! Median, by the way, was also a scintillating +0.53% m/m, the highest since last February. Thanks to base effects, the y/y Median CPI was essentially flat, at 4.90% y/y.

Because of the deceleration in housing I expect, I continue to see Median slowing to the high-3s, low-4s over the middle of this year. But it is going to have a hard time getting lower than that. In the short-term, we have saucy performance from core services ex-shelter. In the short- and medium-term, core goods is going to get out of deflation (although I don’t expect it to rise very far). And then housing should re-accelerate, though not back to the old highs. In short, inflation is a long way from being beaten. I am sure that somehow, that’s bullish for stonks, but I can’t figure out why. (I hear the 3-month moving average of the last four months of CPI, dropping the highest month, looks good.)

Inflation Guy’s CPI Summary (Dec 2023)

January 11, 2024 10 comments

You can follow me on X at @inflation_guy. Sign up for email updates to my occasional articles here. Individual and institutional investors, issuers and risk managers with interests in this area be sure to stop by Enduring Investments! Check out the Inflation Guy podcast!

I’m changing the way I do the monthly CPI analysis. Doing it live for an audience was always stressful, especially with the inevitable data issues from time to time. Of course, as an inflation investor/trader I’ll still do it live; I just don’t have an audience. The nice part about doing it live was that the monthly report had a very similar structure to it with the same charts all of the time, and that will change. But it also means that I can lead with the important stuff sometimes, like this month. So I’m going to start today’s discussion of the slightly above-consensus CPI report (+0.31% on core, vs expectations for +0.25%) by saying the quiet part out loud:

Rents aren’t collapsing. They are decelerating, and they will continue to do so, but they are not going into deflation. Everyone today seems to be acting as if this is some huge shock, but it really isn’t. The only reason to ever have thought there would be rental deflation in an environment of housing shortage was that some of the high-frequency rent indices (which are not designed to be high-quality data; they’re data derived from a business that have been packaged as if it is high-quality data) suggested declines in rents, and an influential article – I talked about it in episode 74 of the Inflation Guy podcast – popularized the notion that you could get more information from the BLS by looking at less data. But the cost side has never improved for landlords – in fact, it keeps getting worse – so it was hard to see how there would be a general decline in rents. In some parts of the country, from which people are migrating away, e.g. perhaps inner cities, rents may fall. But those people have to go somewhere. Big migration means the housing stock is now all in the wrong places, and rents go up when there’s a shortage faster than they fall when there’s a glut.

Anyway, both my costs-based rents model above and my old rents model below suggest the same destination for rents – middle of this year or just afterwards, y/y rents should get to around 2-3%. That’s a lot lower than the current run rate for rents, of +0.47% m/m for OER and +0.42% for Primary rents this month, but it’s also far above what the general expectation has been for this large part of the consumption basket. Moreover, it appears that the longer-term pressures are for that part of inflation to scoop back higher, not lower.

So, today’s rents number was a little surprising, but not that surprising. Some are attributing the miss today to ‘just rents,’ as if it’s okay for the largest part of the CPI to have a trajectory that’s confounding many forecasts, but it wasn’t just rents. Median inflation was +0.42% m/m, keeping the y/y number above 5%. And three of the last four figures have been in that zone. Median should keep decelerating too, but it is not collapsing.

Now, I’ll note that Used Car prices were weird, again. They rose +0.49% m/m, when I (and most folks) had expected a decline. They’ve been a bit squirrelly for a while, with official inflation printing higher than the private surveys fairly persistently for 6-9 months. But on the other hand, airline fares have been persistently squirrelly lower compared to jet fuel, so these two things were ‘errors’ in the opposite direction. This month, airfares also rose, by about 1% m/m – but that was right about where it should have been given the change in fuel prices and not a surprise.

Now, the diffusion stuff is looking better, and supports the idea that median inflation will continue to decelerate.

Such a deceleration has been and continues to be my forecast. I expect median inflation to settle in the high 3%s, low 4%s, and be hard to push much below that. In the near-term, meaning maybe by early H2 of this year, we could get some numbers a little below that as the rent deceleration continues. But then the hook happens. It will be hard to get inflation below 3% for very long, especially if the Fed decides to stop shrinking its balance sheet and money supply growth recovers.

So the system is normalizing after COVID (and more relevantly, after the spastic and dramatic fiscal and monetary response to COVID). But normal is no longer sub-2%. Core services ex-shelter (so-called “supercore”) abstracts both from the deceleration in housing and the sharp drop in core goods, and it is hooking higher (this is partly because Health Insurance had been artificially depressing it and that effect is waning).

Supercore is unlikely to really plunge either. Wages remain robust. The Atlanta Fed just released its Wage Growth Tracker, at 5.2% for the fourth month in a row. The spread between median wages and median inflation, which had been stable around 1% for a long while, is heading back there (see chart). So again, we’re looking at something around 4% for median inflation unless wages start to decelerate…and there’s as yet no sign of that.

The bottom line is that while this number was only a little bit surprising, it was surprising for all the wrong reasons. There is nothing in this figure that suggests the Fed can comfortably abandon a tight-money policy and think about easing soon, and I don’t expect them to do so.

Summary of My Post-CPI Tweets (Nov 2023)

December 12, 2023 8 comments

Below is a summary of my post-CPI tweets. You can follow me on X at @inflation_guy. Sign up for email updates to my occasional articles here. Individual and institutional investors, issuers and risk managers with interests in this area be sure to stop by Enduring Investments! Check out the Inflation Guy podcast!

  • Welcome to the #CPI #inflation walkup for December (November’s figure). This is the last month I’ll be doing this live!
  • Thanks to all of you who have subscribed, voting with your dollars that this was useful. I’ve suspended all renewals so you will no longer be charged after today. I’m deeply grateful that you participated in this experiment. Thank you!!
  • As in the past, if you miss the live tweets, you can find a summary later at https://inflationguy.blog and I will podcast a summary at inflationguy.podbean.com . Those will continue in 2024 after the live tweeting stops.
  • For this month, I’m on top of the consensus economists’ forecasts for core, but higher for headline. I left Cleveland Fed out because it’s routinely the worst.
  • Here’s a rough sketch of where I get my core. Average of the last 3 core numbers is 0.28%; average of the last 6 is 0.26% but that includes a couple of outliers. Average of the last 6 median CPIs is 0.34%. Roughly, overall trend core is about 0.28%.
  • But we have to add 1bp for Health Insurance; and I’m writing in -1% m/m for Used Cars which is a 3bp drag. That’s an abbreviated version of how I get 0.26%, but it’s pretty close.
  • A quick word on Used Cars, which I have as a drag but some of the big shops have as a +. Black Book fell about 3.7%, seasonally adjusted, last month. The seasonals are an add back, but the add back is much less than the decline. I might be wrong on this, but I don’t see the add.
  • That said, there were several months recently that SHOULD have been an add, and were a subtraction, so maybe some economists are expecting a correction. Or maybe my model is just bad.
  • What I am NOT including is any drag from airfares. If you’ve followed these tweets in the past you know that airfares have been quite low for the level of jet fuel prices (see chart, red dot is end-of-Nov fuel and end-of-Oct SA fares)
  • This month, jet fuel prices plunged, so I think some people have penciled in a decline in airfares. And it could happen. But all this really does is move fares back in line with the current jet fuel (yellow triangle, if NSA fares were unchanged).
  • FWIW, there is no strong seasonal adjustment from Oct to Nov in airfares. They tend to drop in December, but that shouldn’t be in this report.
  • Previously, I’d been assuming a boost from airfares moving back in the direction of the trendline. That hasn’t happened. If again the dots move just parallel to the line, the jet fuel drop implies about a -3.3% decline in airfares, which is worth 2.5bps on core.
  • So if we get a low number like that, the first place I’m looking is shelter (just because it’s big); the second place is airfares.
  • Obviously we’re still going to watch shelter. OER was +0.41% m/m and Primary Rents +0.50% last month. I expect both of those to be lower. On the other hand, Lodging Away from Home should swing in the other direction, so shelter overall should be similar to last month.
  • Fair disclosure that my Primary Rents model starts to drop fairly rapidly now, so if I take the number naively then I’d be penciling in 0.32% m/m for Primary Rents. That would be much lower than anything we’ve seen m/m yet. And, anecdotally, I don’t see that yet.
  • Finally – my headline ‘forecast’ is higher than others’. And that’s because of piped gas, and because I don’t get fired if I miss. Natural Gas spiked in October; given usual lags that SHOULD mean ‘Piped Gas’ is higher this month.
  • That would add 7bps, while gasoline drags about 22bps. But subsequent to that, Nat Gas has dropped sharply. And I don’t think most people want to forecast HIGHER gas and try to catch the zig-zag. Safer to just forecast flat.
  • If it’s flat, then my headline is exactly in line w/ CPI swaps: -0.21% m/m NSA, +0.10% SA headline. But if I’m taking the mechanical drag from gasoline then I’m taking the mechanical bump from Natty. (Although to be fair, gasoline passes into CPI directly and Natty doesn’t.)
  • Turning to markets. Market movements this month are all lower, as the massive bond rally can be seen in real rates and in breakevens.
  • Let’s not lose sight of the fact that the monetary metrics are continued good news. M2 is still negative y/y and q/q. And bank loan growth is also very soft (a lot of that is mortgages though).
  • Now, you can kinda think of the ‘potential energy’ as the amount the line moved above some trend…say 5%, 6% money growth or loan growth…and it needs to ‘absorb’ that by being below by a certain amount (or the price level will be permanently higher, which is likely the case).
  • How long can money growth be below 0? I’ve already been surprised! But if the market is right about the substantial Fed easing in 2024, then money growth will not stay low enough, for long enough, to get inflation back to where everyone wants it.
  • OK, bottom line is that everyone is forecasting a SOFT 0.3% on core, meaning that it will round up and barely keep y/y rounding to 4.0%. If shelter comes in soft or airfares moves with jet fuel, it will be a downside surprise.
  • But stocks are already on the roof and bonds are 75bps off the high yields. I am not sure an 0.23% or 0.24% on core will be greeted with a tremendous market rally. But 0.31%…or heaven forbid an 0.34% that turns Core CPI up a tick? That would be ugly.
  • Ergo I think a downside surprise is the bigger chance, but the smaller effect. I’d sell the initial pop. An upside surprise: I wouldn’t try to catch the knife. Especially in illiquid year-end conditions.
  • So that’s a wrap. Good luck today, and thanks again for your persistent support!

  • Humorously, it looks like Twitter changed its authorization hooks again. So the auto chart will be manual again. Wish it could have been smooth for this last month! I’ll do it pretty quickly though.
  • Well, +0.097% on SA headline, and +0.285% on SA Core. Higher than expectations, but not by much.
  • Immediately jumping out is OER at +0.50%, higher than last month’s +0.41%. Primary Rents +0.48%, down slightly from last month but still wayy above my model. And my model is higher than what the Street has, which has been projecting deflation next year in rents.
  • Used Cars was in fact an add. +1.58%, despite a 4% fall in (NSA) retail prices. The BLS seasonals just don’t have that much of a drop off, so it must be that some other survey was showing higher retail used car prices.

Some charts in a minute. BLS blocked everything for a bit.

  • Airfares was -0.39%; recall I’d assumed flat despite a large decline in jet fuel. Feel good about that one. But Lodging Away from Home was -0.9% m/m.
  • Last 12 Core CPI. The downside momentum is less evident now.
  • Major subgroups. I will come back to this. Medical Care was an outlier compared to recent trends. Doctors’ Services rose more than 1% m/m. As I said I’ll come back to that.
  • Core goods inflation got to 0, but core services inflation stayed at 5.1% y/y. I continue to think core goods inflation is just about done declining, but Used Cars keeps pulling it slowly lower.
  • OER and Primary rents. Yes, they’re decelerating. But wayyyyyyyy less than people expected. 0.50% on OER m/m, and 0.48% on Primary Rents. Lodging Away from Home was the only drag on shelter.
  • Some ‘COVID’ Categories:

Airfares  -0.39% M/M (-0.91% Last)

Lodging Away from Home  -0.93% M/M (-2.45% Last)

Used Cars/Trucks  1.58% M/M (-0.8% Last)

New Cars/Trucks  -0.06% M/M (-0.09% Last)

  • My early guess on Median CPI is a rise to +0.434%, above 0.4%. As with core, the downside momentum here isn’t clear any more. Leveling out in the mid 0.3s gets us 4.25% or so y/y. Not good enough.
  • Piece 1: Food and energy was a bit of a drag. HOWEVER, Piped Gas was +4.05% m/m, which added 0.04% to headline inflation – that’s the main source of the headline miss. I should note, I pointed this out…overall, Energy was a -0.23% drag.
  • Piece 2: core goods, back to flat.
  • Piece 3: the most disturbing piece, because it’s ‘supercore’ and now hooking higher. This is medical and I’ll come back to it.
  • Piece 4 rent of shelter. A loooooooong way to go before deflation!
  • Food was +0.22% m/m (SA), after +0.30% last month. Food at home was softer thanks to declining shipping, packaging, and commodities costs: +0.11% SA m/m vs 0.26% last. Food Away from Home remains bubbly thanks to wages: +0.43% SA m/m vs +0.37% last.
  • Doctors’ services jumped 0.55% m/m. Y/y, it’s still -0.7%, but this jump contributed to the surprise in core and in ‘supercore’. It’s mostly a payback for the -1% surprise plunge last month.
  • Core inflation ex-housing rose to 2.13% y/y, the first sequential acceleration since March. Not alarming at 2.13%, but prior to COVID this was in the low 1s.
  • Biggest m/m declines were Mens/Boys Apparel (-26% annualized), Car/Truck Rental (-24%), Infants/Toddlers Apparel (-15%), Womens/Girls Apparel (-13%), Motor Vehicle Fees (-13%), and Lodging Away from Home (-11%). The Apparel decline is seasonal holiday discounting.
  • Biggest annualized m/m core increases: Used Cars & Trucks (+21%), Tobacco & Smoking Products (+15%), Public Transportation (+13%), and Motor Vehicle Insurance (+12%).
  • I love it when a plan comes together.
  • Glancing at the markets, I must say I haven’t the slightest idea why we rallied hard in both stocks and bonds on this data. This is not bullish data.
  • Have to point out the inflation swap market nailed the headline figure. You can’t trade core in size, but the Kalshi market going in had it at +0.32%. That always seemed high to me.
  • Overall, this was fairly close to expectations but the fact that it was shelter holding it up – which is why Median was high, also – is bad news. The entire mainstream thesis on inflation going back to target DEPENDS on something close to deflation in housing.
  • …well, deflation in housing OR calamity elsewhere in services. Thanks to the lags in housing, core inflation is going to drip somewhat lower, but it won’t get below 3% before it is hooking higher UNLESS housing really does belly flop. No sign of that at all.
  • I guess the counterargument is “but it’s ONLY housing holding it up.” That’s not really true, though. Actually the far left tail of goods in deflation is getting bigger – but that’s the short-cycle stuff (e.g. core goods) that will rotate back up. Services, housing still high.
  • I shouldn’t obscure the good news, which is that the breadth of inflation is narrowing. And the decline in the monetary aggregates is promising. The problem is that we have just SO FAR TO GO and the market anyway is expecting the Fed to take its eye off the ball.
  • In conclusion – yes, Virginia, this IS the hard part. Core and Median will drip lower thanks to shelter. That takes us from 4% to what, 3-3.25% in 2024 – before shelter’s disinflation is complete. Then what?
  • I continue to expect inflation to settle in the high 3s, low 4s, although continued decline in the aggregates will have me push that a little lower. Maybe we’re mid-3s to high-3s in the medium term now, with cycle bottom around 3%. Is that good enough? Doesn’t feel like it.
  • That’s all for today. And all for @InflGuyPlus! Thanks again for subscribing to this channel. Be sure to subscribe to the blog at https://inflationguy.blog and follow the podcast at https://inflationguy.podbean.com or your favorite podcast app – so we’ll stay in touch. Merry Christmas!

This number was a little bit above expectations, led by shelter, Used Cars, and Physicians’ Services. There weren’t a lot of large surprises (Physicians’ Services was an unexpected jump but last month it had an unexpected decline so this is best viewed as a give-back), which helps explain the relatively placid market response. Ultimately, how you feel about inflation these days comes mostly down to shelter although it is worth pointing out that ‘super core’ (core services ex-rent of shelter) hooked slightly higher too.

To get inflation back to target in 2024, we would need one or more of the following to happen:

  • Shelter inflation indeed goes negative, as the mainstream forecast expects (but I do not – I believe rents will level off around 3% y/y and then likely rise from there); or
  • Core goods goes into hard deflation, of -2%ish. With Used Cars already having given up 17% or so off its highs, it is unlikely to be the driver of that. Apparel? Medicinal Drugs? (chart below shows the striking relationship between the growth in M2 since the end of 2019 and the contour of Used Car prices – driving home again how important a continued decline in the money supply is, if we want inflation to get tame again); or
  • Core Services ex-Shelter decelerates markedly. For that to happen, we’d probably need to see wages decelerate a lot more. The chart below shows the Atlanta Fed wages measure (y/y) in black, and ‘supercore’ as Bloomberg calculates it in blue. If you want Supercore down to 2%, then you probably need wages at 3-4%. We have a long ways to go there.

To repeat my recent theme: while the inflation numbers are better, and will keep getting better for a while in 2024 because of easy comps and positive trends, we are into ‘the hard part.’ The current trends do not point to inflation placidly returning to 2-2.25% in 2024, or in 2025 unless the money supply continues to shrink.

And that’s where we run into the issue. The market is pricing in something like 125bps of eases over the course of 2024. While it’s possible that the Fed could cut rates while continuing to shrink the balance sheet (since the Fed funds rate is now just stated, rather than being managed through pressure on reserve balances), it would be very odd for the Fed to do something that looks like easing with one hand and tightening with the other. They’d come under a tremendous amount of criticism for that. While that’s actually my recommended strategy for them, I don’t give it much chance of happening.

So, if that’s not going to happen, then one of two things is going to happen:

  1. The Fed eases in 2024, and ceases shrinking the balance sheet. This is great for the bond market in the short term, but it would mean inflation probably wouldn’t even get back to 3% on core before re-accelerating. And no one will be able to blame the next increase (probably not a spike) on COVID.
  2. The Fed does not ease in 2024, in which case at some point the bond and stock markets are going to have to stop pricing loose money. That would of course be very bad for stocks and bonds.

There aren’t any easy ways out. Yes, that’s what “this is the hard part” means!

Summary of My Post-CPI Tweets (Oct 2023)

November 14, 2023 3 comments

Below is a summary of my post-CPI tweets. You can follow me on X at @inflation_guy. Sign up for email updates to my occasional articles here. Individual and institutional investors, issuers and risk managers with interests in this area be sure to stop by Enduring Investments! Check out the Inflation Guy podcast!

  • Welcome to the #CPI #inflation walkup for November (October’s figure). This is the next-to-last month I will be doing this!
  • If you miss the live tweets, you can find a summary later at https://inflationguy.blog and I will podcast a summary at inflationguy.podbean.com . Those will continue in 2024 after the live tweeting stops.
  • Well, this report ought to be interesting. My forecasts are very different from the other forecasts out there. The Bloomberg consensus has +0.09% on SA headline, and 0.30% on core. The swap market, Kalshi, and Cleveland Fed are all in the same ballpark.
  • I have 0.14% NSA, roughly 0.22% on headline, and 0.38% on core.
  • It is a little wild to me that everyone else is so low, and it makes me concerned that I’m missing something. But I think it comes down to the fact that everyone must be expecting a big give-back on OER this month.
  • Used car prices should add this month. Health care insurance pivots from an 0.04% drag to an 0.02% add. Even airfares could rise, despite sliding jet fuel, because fares are too low given the level of fuel.
  • All of those are in my forecast (well, I conceded flat on airfares but it could go either way). I assume they’re in everyone’s forecast. So that leads me to believe that the assumption is a correction in OER is in store.
  • OK, I see the chart too. It sure LOOKS like OER did something weird last month. If OER prints 0.45% m/m instead of 0.55%, then that takes 2.5bps off my forecast. That still doesn’t get there. You need an 0.35% or something.
  • And oh by the way, I’d argue that the jump might just be payback for a too-rapid fall that happened earlier this year. There was no reason to expect monthlies to drop from 0.7% m/m in Feb to 0.48% in March. Rents are not collapsing and home prices are now going back up.
  • I know that’s inconvenient to the deflation story but it’s right on par with where my model says it should be. (Our model is Primary Rents but OER is based on rents).
  • So okay, I’ll drop my forecast 2.5bps on the assumption we go back to 0.45% m/m for OER. Now ya happy?!? But I’m not assuming any ‘payback’.
  • Meanwhile, I haven’t even talked about the fact that I have +1% on Used Cars, but that might be too conservative given how strong auctions were in the latter part of September (not picked up in the last number).
  • And I don’t have anything for New Cars – but thanks to the new wage agreement, car prices both New and Used are going to go up again.
  • I’ve already spoken plenty about the reversal in Health Insurance; it shouldn’t take anyone by surprise this year.
  • The change in method means that the shift from -0.04% to +0.02% per month should only last six months – it shortens the lag but this transition period increases the effect to synchronize.
  • With all this, Core CPI should stay at 4.1% y/y, or rise (if my forecast is on point). As I said last month, getting it below 4% is going to be more of a challenge. And Median inflation will fall to probably around 5.25% this month, but again we’re in the hard part now.
  • Breakevens have net slumped a bit this month, but that hides the fact that after last month’s CPI they spiked for a week or so. 10y breaks got to 2.50%  in the bond market selloff before settling back.
  • If the bond bear market continues (and the balance of large government budget deficits, smaller trade deficits, and a Fed in run-off means more pressure on rates to attract domestic savers), breakevens will go back up.
  • Not sure that’s a good play in Q4, since this tends to be a good seasonal time for bonds, but a bad CPI could change that. And, naturally, with a recession coming (we think?) it’ll be harder to get higher rates immediately.
  • However…the secular bull market in bonds is over so the real question is whether interest rates are aimless for a decade, or in a secular bear market. Too long a topic for a tweet storm!
  • So that’s it for the walkup. Pretty simple task today: 1. check OER, 2. check core ex-housing, 3. check core services ex-housing (“supercore” for a finer read on the Fed (?))
  • Keep checking the improving distribution of inflation – core below median means the tails are moving to the downside, in a disinflationary signature, but not sure that will outlast 2024.
  • Good luck!

  • Very soft number! Let’s see how much of this is ‘payback.’
  • If it’s CPI day there must be I.T. issues. It’s a law. Headline was +0.045%, Core +0.227%. Used cars was a DRAG, which is completely at odds with surveys. OER dropped to 0.41% m/m, but that by itself wouldn’t be enough for the downside surprise.
  • Airfares fell, Lodging away from home fell significantly, New Cars was a marginal decline…and health insurance didn’t add as much as it was supposed to (not sure why) although it was positive. Looks like a well-rounded soft number.
  • Here is m/m OER. Back to prior level, but no payback.
  • In the big picture, the 3-month average isn’t all that soothing, especially when we look at Used Cars and other quirks that will likely be repaid.
  • So Black Book was -1.85% in September, NSA CPI Used Cars was -5.63%. BB was +1.07% in October, NSA CPI Used Cars was -1.40%. Private auctions were strong. This is confounding – might be a seasonal quirk that BLS reflects different seasonals, but the NSA pretty far off.
  • m/m CPI: 0.0449% m/m Core CPI: 0.227%
  • Last 12 core CPI figures
  • M/M, Y/Y, and prior Y/Y for 8 major subgroups
  • Primary Rents: 7.18% y/y           OER: 6.85% y/y
  • Further: Primary Rents 0.5% M/M, 7.18% Y/Y (7.41% last)     OER 0.41% M/M, 6.85% Y/Y (7.08% last)     Lodging Away From Home -2.5% M/M, 1.2% Y/Y (7.3% last)
  • Some ‘COVID’ Categories: Airfares -0.91% M/M (0.28% Last)     Lodging Away from Home -2.45% M/M (3.65% Last)     Used Cars/Trucks -0.8% M/M (-2.53% Last)     New Cars/Trucks -0.09% M/M (0.3% Last)
  • Here is my early and automated guess at Median CPI for this month: 0.359%
  • Now, this is really the important thing. Median is still 0.36%. That tells you this is left-tail stuff more than the rents stuff.
  • Piece 1: Food & Energy: 0.17% y/y
  • Food at Home was +0.26% SA; Food Away from Home +0.37%. Food added 0.04% to headline, which was right on my forecast. Look, talk to any restaurateur – wages are still a big problem. Food AFH isn’t going to deflate soon.
  • Energy was -0.22% m/m NSA; I’d estimated -0.17% so it was very slightly more drag.
  • Piece 2: Core Commodities: 0.0948% y/y
  • Piece 3: Core Services less Rent of Shelter: 3.71% y/y
  • Piece 4: Rent of Shelter: 6.76% y/y
  • Core Goods: 0.0948% y/y        Core Services: 5.5% y/y
  • Core goods actually ticked up slightly. Despite the decline in Used and New cars.
  • This is part of the core goods story – continued acceleration in Medicinal Drugs. Honestly this is something we’ve been expecting for a long time and just surprised how long it has taken. Many of the APIs for pharma come from China.
  • Core ex-housing actually ticked up very slightly from 1.97% y/y to 2.05% y/y. That sounds great but prior to COVID it hadn’t been above 2% since 2012 so that’s still too high.
  • Largest declines (annualized m/m) in core were Lodging Away From Home (which is quite surprising) at -26% and Car and Truck Rental (also surprising) at -17%. Both core services but only the latter is “supercore”.
  • Largest advances Motor Vehicle Insurance +26%, Tobacco +25%, Jewelry and Watches +16%.
  • I am probably not going to be exactly right on median because in my calculation the median category is Northeast Urban OER, which means we’re relying on my ad-hoc seasonal adjustment. Could be as low as 0.32% m/m, or a smidge higher. Either way, it’s not price stability.
  • I guess on Health Insurance I’ll have to leave the explanation to someone with a pointier pencil. My calculations had the effect being about 2bps/month; this month is was about 0.8bps. I would call that negligible except that previously it had been a 4bps drag.
  • Our housing model, updated with the latest data. Kinda right on par. But notice our model never gets anywhere close to deflation in housing. Those calling for such are going to be disappointed.
  • This is a strange dichotomy and I wonder if some physician can explain it. Maybe doctors are making their money by channeling expensive services through hospitals. But it’s weird to see hospital inflation so buoyant while doctors’ services are deflating.
  • Education and Communication was a little soft. Some of that was a curious (to me) -0.24% NSA m/m decline in College tuition and fees. Probably a quirk. Also Telephone hardware was -1.9% m/m.
  • Apparel was soft – partly this is expected because of the lagged strength of the dollar on core goods, but the -5.1% decline in Women’s outerwear seems unusual.
  • The EI Inflation Diffusion Index is back almost to flat. Note that doesn’t mean 0 inflation. To get back to persistently having Median CPI around 2-3%, you’d want to see the diffusion index quite a bit negative. I think that’s going to be difficult.
  • Last chart, and it tells the story. Left tail is growing, but rest of the distribution is moving left only reluctantly. The big fingers on the right are housing. It’s encouraging that there is more diversity here – a sign that the money impulse that affects everything is waning.
  • Here is today’s summary. Core was surprisingly tame but it was largely from some quirky one-offs. Median didn’t improve very much. Neither Core nor Median over the last 3 months is where the Fed wants it. This doesn’t change, therefore, the higher-for-longer meme.
  • It also doesn’t demand further tightening, but that’s not news. We already knew the Fed was done.
  • Looking ahead, there will be further slow progress on housing, although as I keep saying – not as much as some forecasters think. The problem is that outside of housing, core inflation doesn’t look like it wants to fall much further.
  • Naturally all of this depends on what the Fed does going forward. If the money supply keeps bumping along around zero growth, then eventually the velocity rebound will run its course and inflation will go back to 2-3%.
  • But higher rates mean that velocity is probably going to do more than just rebound, so higher for longer will need to be longer than people expect – or, possibly, than the Fed can maintain in the face of recession.
  • That’s the hard part. This so far has been the easy part. If market rates rise again in sloppy fashion after the new year, despite recession signs…what does the Fed do? Inflation won’t be at target yet, or even close. Stay tuned!
  • …and thanks for staying tuned. Have a good day.

The CPI was a happy surprise today, but not so much that I would throw a party. The low miss was partly caused by inexplicable declines in autos and lodging away from home, while the correction in rents basically just went back to the prior level rather than stepping down to a slower pace. Rents are still going to come down, and in some places in the country they are falling – but in some places they are still rising briskly.

That dispersion in experienced rental inflation is actually part of the good news, and it’s good news that we see throughout the CPI over the last several months. It’s the good news that the Enduring Investments Inflation Diffusion Index is capturing: all prices are not moving as one, as they mostly did during the upswing in inflation. A high correlation between unrelated categories tends to suggest a common impulse is causing the movement – and is yet another reason that the notion that inflation was coming from various idiosyncratic supply chain issues should never have been entertained. There was clearly a large impulse acting on all prices: the 20%+ spike in money growth. Now that the money supply is flat, though velocity is rebounding, price dispersion is reasserting.

(Spoiler alert: it isn’t yet happening on the inter-country experience – all countries saw their inflation move in synchrony when it went up, and all are seeing it move in synchrony coming down, so it’s early to say the battle is won.)

We’re still just starting the difficult part, from the standpoint of monetary policy but also from the standpoint of figuring out how quickly inflation can get tamped back down to target. And the dispersion makes that more difficult, because the signal gets lost in the noise – just as it used to, before the money gusher. Next month we’ll have to deal with likely rebounds in Lodging Away from Home as well as increases in autos, reversing this month’s surprises, but we’ll probably get slightly better rent numbers.

What I can say is that the market reaction to all of this is absurd. This just doesn’t move the needle on the Fed. There was no tightening and no easing in the pipeline before this number, and after this number that hasn’t changed an iota. But at this hour stocks are +2% and bonds are soaring. I know the conventional wisdom is that rates are going back to zero…it just seems kind of early to get on that train when median inflation is still 5.3%…