Fed’s Favorite Inflation Indicator Holds At 7-Month High


The Fed’s favorite (until it starts rising) inflation indicator – Core PCE – printed cooler than expected for November (+0.1% MoM vs +0.2% MoM exp) which held it steady at +2.8% YoY (below the expected 2.9%) – tied for the highest since April…Source: BloombergHowever, Headline PCE rose to +2.4% from +2.3% – its highest since July…Durable (and non-durable) Goods Deflation has all but evaporated now…The so-called SuperCore – Core Services Ex-Shelter PCE – rose 0.16% MoM leaving the index up 3.51% YoY (steady at its highest since April)…Finally, both the cyclical and acyclical components of inflation are on the rise once again (the latter being out of the control of The Fed implicitly)…Source: BloombergNot a good sign and perhaps The SF Fed’s report is what prompted Powell’s pivot to the hawkish dark-side. Or is this what he realy fears?Source: BloombergOf course, we all know who will get the blame if that replay occurs!More By This Author:Intel Shortlists Suitors For Chip Division Altera Amid Turnaround EffortsJobless Claims Improve, Q3 GDP Revised Higher, But Another Manufacturing Survey CollapsesHawkish Fed Cut Rates As Expected; Signals Dramatically Less Aggressive Rate-Cut Cycle

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