The Federal Reserve’s favorite inflation indicator, the Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) price index, hit a 5 month high in October. This increase cemented a trend that looks like a stabilization in inflation that in turn threatens to keep inflation above the 2.0% target as the Fed continues to cut rates. The chart below compares the year-over-year inflation rates for CPI (Consumer Price Index) vs the PCE.Sources: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, Personal Consumption Expenditures Excluding Food and Energy (Chain-Type Price Index) [PCEPILFE], retrieved from FRED, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: All Items Less Food and Energy in U.S. City Average [CPILFESL], retrieved from FRED, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, November 27, 2024.October’s core PCE, PCE excluding food and energy, came in at 2.8% in October, up from 2.7% in September. Core PCE was last higher in April at 2.9%. Sticky service inflation is a key driver of the current stabilization. While prices for goods decreased 1.0%, prices for services increased 3.9%. Services expenditures increased across each sub-category: housing and utilities, health care, transportation services, recreation services, food services and accommodations, financial services and insurance, and other services. This broad-based strength is indicative of a strong economy where consumer spending remains robust. This robustness also presents a key challenge for the Fed as it seeks to “recalibrate” monetary policy by cutting rates. Even if the job market needs the relief, the (services) economy clearly does not need the rate cut relief at this juncture.Interestingly, long-term yields decreased in the wake of the hot PCE news. The iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) increased 0.7% (yields down) to a 1-month high. Given this move is inconsistent with a stabilizing, and perhaps now an increasing inflation rate, I attribute TLT’s move to a continuation of the week’s relief rally. TLT gapped higher in relief after Trump selected hedge fund executive Scott Bessent to head the U.S. Treasury Department. Once the dust settles, I expect TLT to fail at or around resistance from its 50-day moving average (DMA) (the red line below) and head back toward the bottom of the current (presumed) trading range. TLT almost tested the bottom of the range after Trump was elected and then again after October CPI came in hot.Full disclosure: long TLT putMore By This Author:The Federal Reserve Is Paying Attention To Stabilizing Core Inflation
Who Is Paying Attention To Stabilizing Core Inflation?
What A Victory Over Inflation Looks Like To The Federal Reserve