With inflation data surprising to the upside recently…Source: Bloomberg…the doves’ last chance for sooner than later rate cuts is today’s Core PCE Deflator – often described as The Fed’s favorite inflation signal. Last month saw an uptick in the headline deflator and following yesterday’s core PCE rise for Q1, all eyes are on the March data released this morning.However, both the headline and core PCE Deflator data printed hotter than expected (+2.7% vs +2.6% exp vs +2.5% prior and +2.8% vs +2.7% exp vs +2.8% prior respectively)…Source: BloombergThe silver lining is that this hot PCE print is ‘dovish’ relative to the GDP-based data we saw yesterday, with whisper numbers of +0.4 to +0.5% MoM (vs the +0.3% print).But, as WSJ Fed Whisperer Nick Timiraos notes, the 3-Month annualized core PCE jumped to 4.4%…The Service sector led the MoM and YoY acceleration in headline PCE…Source: BloombergAnd for Core PCE, it was Services prices too that drove the acceleration…Source: BloombergThe so-called SuperCore – Services inflation ex-Shelter -rose once again, and was revised higher…Source: BloombergIncome and Spending both rose again on a MoM basis with spending outpacing income (again). The 0.8% MoM rise in spending was the highest since Jan 2023…Source: BloombergOn the income side, government and private wage growth acclerated:
Source: BloombergWhich meant the personal savings rate plunged to 3.2% from 3.6% – its lowest since Nov 2022…And the soaring credit card balance explains how people are getting by…Source: BloombergFinally, while the markets are exuberant at the survey-based disinflation, we do note that it’s not all sunshine and unicorns. The vast majority of the reduction in inflation has been ‘cyclical’…Source: BloombergAcyclical Core PCE inflation remains extremely high, although it has fallen from its highs.Is The (apolitical) Fed going to be able to cut at all this year like Joe Biden said they would?More By This Author:Microsoft Surges As AI-Growth Drives Across-The-Board Beat
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