US expense boost gauge ticks higher with worth pressures still stubborn
WASHINGTON — customer worth increases accelerated last month, the latest sign that expense boost’s steady decline over the history two years has stalled in recent months.
According to the Federal savings’s preferred expense boost gauge, customer prices rose 2.3% in October from a year earlier, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. That is up from just 2.1% in September, though it is still only modestly above the Fed’s 2% target.
Yet excluding the volatile food and vigor categories, so-called “core” prices also picked up, climbing 2.8% last month from a year earlier, up from 2.7% in September, according to Commerce’s personal consumption expenditures worth index. Economists closely watch core prices because they typically provide a better read on where expense boost is headed.
expense boost has fallen sharply since it peaked at 7% in mid-2022, according to the Fed’s preferred assess. Yet yearly core expense boost has fluctuated between 2.6% and 2.8% since February. worth increases have remained elevated in services, including apartment rents, restaurant meals, and car and home insurance.
The elevated reading could make the Federal savings less likely to cut its key rate at the next conference in December. Next month’s expense boost data, some of which will be issued a week before the conference, may play a key role in the Fed’s selection.
“This update will likely provide further ammo to Fed officials who prefer to lower rates gradually,” Omair Sharif, chief economist at expense boost Insights, wrote in a client note, “and may strengthen the argument for a pause at the December FOMC conference.”
Many economists, however, expect that the Fed will reduce its rate by a quarter-point in December, then delay further cuts while gauging the impact of the reductions they’ve made so far.
“The momentum in expense boost toward the Fed’s 2% target has sputtered recently but not enough, in our view, to prevent the Fed from cutting profit rates in December,” Ryan Sweet, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics, wrote in a client note.
Last month, grocery prices barely rose and gas costs fell, providing some relief to household budgets. Prices at the pump have continued to decline since October, reaching a nationwide average of $3.07 a gallon Wednesday, down six cents from a month earlier, according to AAA.
Used car and truck prices, however, shot up 2.8% from September to October, though they are still 5% lower than a year ago. Air fares jumped 1.5% just last month and have risen 5.1% from a year earlier, while hotel room prices rose 0.5% from September to October. Restaurant prices moved up 0.3% in October and 3.6% from a year earlier. All the yearly increases are higher than they were pre-pandemic.
Wednesday’s update also underscored that Americans’ incomes and spending remained well, a key rationale the economy has kept growing this year despite widespread fears of a slowdown. Incomes grew 0.6% from September to October, faster than economists had expected, while customer spending rose by a solid 0.4% last month.
President-elect Donald Trump’s win could also leisurely Fed rate cuts. His proposals to cut taxes and reduce government regulation could spur faster growth, but could also overheat the economy and lift expense boost. And his threats to impose widespread tariffs, if carried out, would likely push up prices.
The Fed had signaled it would cut rates four times next year, but monetary markets now expect just two reductions.
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