The BEA’s Personal Income and Outlays report for November shows real (inflation-adjusted) disposable personal income rose 0.2 percent and real spending rose 0.3 percent.To arrive at real numbers, subtract the PCE price index spending and income.
Personal IncomeThe increase in current-dollar personal income in November primarily reflected an increase in compensation that was partly offset by decreases in personal income receipts on assets and personal current transfer receipts.
Personal Consumption Expenditures
PCE Price Index
Market ReactionsThe 0.1 percent rise in the PCE price index and core PCE price index was better than the Bloomberg Econoday consensus estimates of 0.2 percent each.The stock market is giddy on the news (it doesn’t take much), reversing some of the losses from the Fed announcement on Wednesday.The yield on the 30-year long bond is down 6 basis point to 4.62 percent, and the yield on the 10-year note is down 8 basis points to 4.49 percent.Nonetheless, it’s been a nasty few weeks for the bond market with yields on the long end rising.The 30-year mortgage rate did not budge. It’s a buyer unfriendly 7.14 percent.
A Hawkish Fed Projects More Inflation, Fewer Interest Rate Cuts in 2025Based on the Fed’s own economic projections and statements, it should not have cut interest rates on Wednesday.Here’s the most galling statement Fed Chair Jerome Powell made “Everything we do is in service to our public mission. We at the Fed will do everything we can to achieve our maximum employment and price stability goals.“This Fed does not follow the data, does not serve the public, and has singlehandedly destroyed the housing market with an unwise mix of QE to infinity and rate cutting madness.For discussion, please see A Hawkish Fed Projects More Inflation, Fewer Interest Rate Cuts in 2025Higher inflation expectations coupled with today’s interest rate cut makes little sense. Nonetheless, the Fed cut rates with only one dissent.More By This Author:The BEA Revises Gross Domestic Product GDP Higher But Income GDI LowerHousing Starts Dip A Modest 1.8 Percent November The Fed Releases Another Grim Set Of US Industrial Production Numbers