Saturday, August 23, 2025

Weekly Indicators for August 18 - 22 at Seeking Alpha

 

 - by New Deal democrat

My “Weekly Indicators” post is up at Seeking Alpha.

There were no big changes this week, but what continues to stick out in the data as far as I am concerned is just how strong consumer spending continues to be: weekly retail spending was up nearly 6% YoY, and restaurant reservations - a very easy thing to cut back if consumers feel pinched - are up 10%. That simply is not compatible with a big slowdown.

As usual, clicking over and reading will bring you up to the virtual moment as to the state of the economy, and bring me a penny or two in my pocket for organizing the data for you.

Friday, August 22, 2025

The rebalancing of the housing market continues, as existing home price increases have halted, and inventory finally exceeds 2020 levels

 

  - by New Deal democrat


The housing market, for all of its economic importance, tends to move as slow as molasses. This is especially true as to prices, where sellers are loathe to realize a loss, even when compared to hypothetical gains they could have had by selling earlier.

The pandemic, of course, through the entire market out of whack, since there was a period of time that it was for all intents and purposes shut down. It is only now rebalancing.

After the Fed began hiking rates in 2022, mortgage rates also rapidly rose from 3% to the 6%-7% range, where they have remained ever since. Since sales follow mortgage interest rates, existing home sales rapidly declined to 4.0 million annualized, and have remained in that range, generally +/-0.20 million for the past 3.5+ years:



In July, the rangebound behavior continued, with sales of 4.01 Million annualized (blue, right scale). Note that new home sales (gray, left scale) similarly declined and have similarly stabilized in the 625,000-725,000 annualized range.

The trend I have been looking for in the past several years is the rebalancing of the new and existing homes markets. Existing home inventory has been removed from the market for over 10 years (likely due in part to absentee rental owners buying increasing chunks of inventory), and really accelerated during the pandemic. This caused an acute shortage of houses for sale, which in turn led to bidding wars among buyers and a spike in prices.

A rebalancing of the market more than anything would require an increase in inventory at least to pre-COVID levels, and a deceleration of price increases, or even outright decreases. Which means that the level of sales themselves was far less important than what the median price for an existing home and inventory are telling us about the ongoing rebalancing of the housing market.

The secular decline in inventory reached a nadir in 2022. This series is not seasonally adjusted, so it must be looked at YoY. In July inventory increased by only 1,000, but more importantly, inventory finally exceeded its 2020 level for the same month, up 5,000:


Still, pre-2020, inventory was typically in the 1.7 million to 1.9 million range, which means that although it is lessening the chronic shortage still exists.

But even more important is what happened, and has continued to happen, with prices. As shown in the below graph, the average price of a new home (gray, left scale, not seasonally adjusted) rose almost 40% between June 2019 and June 2022 before slowly declining about -7% through June 2025. Meanwhile, the average price of an existing home (blue, right scale, not seasonally adjusted) rose about 45% between July 2019 and July 2022 and another 5% through July of this year, as was reported yesterday:



With seasonal adjustments are not made, my rule of thumb is that a peak (or trough) occurs when the YoY% change is less than half of its maximum change in the past 12 months. Here are the comparisons in the past 12 months:

July 4.2%
August 3.1%
September 2.9%
October 4.0%
November 4.7%
December 6.0%
January 4.8%
February 3.6%
March 2.7%
April 1.8%
May 1.3%
June 2.0%

As of yesterday’s report for July, the YoY% change in average prices was only 0.2% higher than one year ago.

Last month I concluded with “I still expect moderation in price increases and more importantly, for inventories finally to exceed their 2020 levels.”

This month, both happened. Inventory finally exceeded 2020 levels, and further, it is safe to say that if we had seasonally adjusted measurements, we could conclude that prices for existing homes peaked sometime this spring, and have started to decline.

Even so, prices of existing homes are still up about 50% from 2019 levels, vs. new single family homes, which are up less than 30%. Which means that while the July existing home sales report confirmed the ongoing rebalancing of the market, there is still some distance to go.

Thursday, August 21, 2025

Jobless claims suggest our recent good news has been more unresolved seasonal quirks

 

 - by New Deal democrat


Initial jobless claims have been plagued by apparent unresolved seasonality in the past several years, post-pandemic. I suspect that is still playing out, as evidenced by the past few weeks of claims.


Initial claims rose 11,000 to 235,000 last week, a seven week high. The four week moving average rose 4,500 to 226,250, the highest in four week. Meanwhile, with the usual one week delay, continuing claims rose 30,000 to 1.972 million, the highest since early November of 2021:



Last week I speculated that the steep decline in initial claims in July might have been due to seasonality issues around layoffs in the education sector, or might be a side effect of large scale deportation raids in some sectors. This week’s report makes me think it is more likely the former than the latter.

To show you why, here is the four week seasonally adjusted average since spring 2022 (blue), together with non-seasonally adjusted initial claims, averaged biweekly (red):



On a non-seasonally adjusted basis, initial claims always peak in January after the Holiday season, with a secondary peak when the school year ends in June. They make their lows around Labor Day, as the new school year begins. In the last several years, the seasonal adjustment has given us low readings in January (i.e., fewer layoffs than was usually the case pre-pandemic), but elevated readings in June and early July at the end of the school year, gradually declining through autumn.

This year the June employment report strongly suggested that end of school year layoffs were slightly askew compared with the last several years. Comparing the SA and NSA readings in the past several months suggests that has affected initial claims as well, with markedly fewer claims at the early July peak. But whereas NSA claims continued to decline through August last year, for the past three weeks this year they have held steady.

We’ll see if that continues to be the case in the next few weeks.

Returning to our regularly scheduled analysis, here are the YoY% changes that are more important for forecasting purposes. Initial claims were 1.3% higher than one year ago, while the four week average was down -3.9%. Continuing claims were higher by 6.1%:



This suggests that layoffs remain subdued, while hiring has seriously slowed down, but not enough to suggest that a recession is close at hand.

Finally, we’re far enough along in the month to take a look at the implications for the unemployment rate. The below graph looks at all three metrics by YoY% change:



This suggests that the the unemployment rate will remain very close to its 4.1%-4.2% of one year ago.

Wednesday, August 20, 2025

Real nonsupervisory payrolls and income in danger of tariff-driven stagnation

 

 - by New Deal democrat


Let’s take a look at the “real” purchasing power of average working and middle class Americans.


The July jobs report showed that average hourly earnings for nonsupervisory workers rose a little under 0.3% (blue in the graph below). Consumer inflation (red) rose 0.2%, so “real” average hourly earnings rose 0.1%. The below graph is the monthly changes in each over the last 24 months, showing that nominal monthly wage gains have slowly decelerated from over 0.3% to about 0.25%, while inflation, with the exception of a few months, was somnolent during 2024 and the first few months of 2025:



The net result is that real average hourly wages for nonsupervisory employees have risen on trend through last month:



Here is the nominal YoY% change in each, showing the slow deceleration of nominal wage gains, along with - until recently - the similar slow deceleration in consumer inflation, driven mainly by slowing real and fictitious rent appreciation:



The danger going forward, obviously, is if tariff-driven inflation picks up, while wage gains continue to decelerate.

For the economy as a whole, the more important metric is real aggregate nonsupervisory payrolls. Last month these jumped by 0.6% nominally, translating into a 0.3% growth in real terms. Thus in absolute terms (blue, right scale) real aggregate nonsupervisory payrolls set a new record, although the pace of improvement has slowed to only a 0.3% gain in the past four months. On a YoY% basis (red, left scale) they are up 2.2%:



To repeat, with almost 100% reliability, a peak in real aggregate nonsupervisory payrolls has preceded recessions in the past 50+ years by a few months. This suggests that no recession is likely in the next few months, although there is the same danger of slowing aggregate payroll growth and accelerating tariff-driven inflation.

Finally, let me update a metric I haven’t noted in awhile, but which showed up as the source for the Oval Office press conference last week in which T—-p touted his “real” economy: namely, the monthly real median household income compilation by Motio Research.
 
This group picked up the torch after Sentier Research discontinued the series. In the graph below, I show the data from 2017 to the present:



T—-p used the series to show how real median household income had increased strongly during his first term (true, until Covid) and stagnated during Biden’s term (true for the first two years, but it rose 2% during the last two years). 

He also showed a graph beginning in January or February of this year, also showing a big increase. This was very misleading. Through May, real median household income hadn’t grown at all this year, and was actually *down* -0.1% since last September. The entirety of the increase came in June, when real median income increased 0.3% in one month (Motio hasn’t updated July yet).

Since the June increase could be one noisy month, the overall trend for the past 9 months has been stagnation in real median household income. Yet another reason to be very concerned if tariffs hit consumer finances harder.

Tuesday, August 19, 2025

Housing remains recessionary. Why hasn’t one happened yet?

 

 - by New Deal democrat


The post pandemic period has been an exception to many past relationships. This morning’s data on housing construction raises the issue as to whether housing is going to be included in those exceptions as well. That’s because the data has been classically recessionary for a number of months, and yet the economy has not rolled over. 

In general, this morning’s report on housing permits, starts, and construction continues the trend of posting low multi-year numbers, but the downward trend may be abating.

Permits (gold in the graph below) declined -39,000 to 1.354 annualized, while the more noisy starts (blue) increased -70,000 to 1.428 annualized. The former in particular remains very close to its post-pandemic lows. The metric that is the least noisy of all and conveys the most signal, single family starts (red), rose 1,000 to 870,000 annualized:



In the above graph, I normalized permits and single family permits to 100 as of their post-pandemic peaks. I did the same for starts, but used their peak three month average. Starts are down 20.0% from their peak, permits 29.5%, and single family permits 30.0%. 

As I showed you last month, the historical pre-pandemic absolute levels of all three of the above metrics indicates that the current levels of decline from peak were typical of those in place at the beginning of most of the recessions of the last 50+ years, although in two cases - 1991 and the Great Recession - they were down 50% or more.



On a YoY% basis, steep declines in permits and starts, generally more than 10% YoY, have persisted right up into recessions:



By contrast, at present, permits are down -5.7% YoY, single family permits -7.9%, and the noisy starts actually higher (vs. a very low July 2024 comp) by 12.9%.

As I have written many times in the past several years, the best “real” measure of the economic impact of housing is units under construction (blue in the graph below). This month they rose 1,000 from last month’s four year low to 1.357 annualized. They remain down 21.9% from their peak (graph compares with single family permits, where both are normalized to 100 as of their respective post-pandemic peaks):



Again, as I’ve written in the past two months, more often than not in the past, by the time units under construction had declined by this much, a recession had already begun. The only two exceptions were the late 1980s, where the pre-recession decline was -28.2%, and 2007, where the pre-recession decline was -25.6%.

One reason why the steep decline in housing has not caused a recession yet is that other durable goods purchases, and in particular motor vehicle purchases, have not followed suit. In the below graph I show the historical pre-pandemic YoY% change in housing units under construction (blue) vs. purchases of autos and light trucks (gold, averaged quarterly):



With the brief exception of the 1981 “double dip” recession, motor vehicle purchases were down YoY for several quarters before the recession began, although in the case of the 2008 Great Recession it was only by about 2%. By contrast, so far this year purchases of cars and light trucks is running slightly *higher* YoY:



As I indicated yesterday, the trend in absolute light vehicle sales this year so far is flat. if that hasn’t changed by the 4th Quarter, we might very well have the negative YoY sales signal from motor vehicles that is lacking at present.

Finally, let’s take a look at housing units under construction (red) vs. the final shoes to drop typically before recessions have started, houses for sale (gold) and residential construction employment (blue), in comparison with units under construction. I won’t bother with the historical view this month, but we did get important revisions in the payrolls report earlier this month:



It appears that the proverbial shoe has dropped with regard to residential construction employment, which as revised has declined every month since March, albeit only by a total of -0.3%. On the other hand, the number of new single family houses for sale made another new high last month.

I would expect all three series to be negative YoY by the time a recession begins. That could happen by the end of this year.

Monday, August 18, 2025

The muddied historical picture of PPI vs. CPI

 

 - by New Deal democrat


Forecasting has always been hard, and moreso since the supply chain issues of 2021-22 made reading the interest rate signals from the long leading indicators muddled. But at least the short leading indicators were intact.


But now we have the additional wrench in the works in the form of a mafia-style blowout being the operative behavior from the US Administration. If sowing chaos were a winning economic move, banana republics everywhere would be wealthy. There’s a good reason why they’re not, and that’s because chaos and corruption make it impossible for producers to foresee the results of their economic actions.

I see no reason to disagree with the idea that the net result of T—-p’s chaotic imposition of tariffs, plus the $Trillions in deficits that will be run up in short order by the recent tax and spending bill will ignite stagflation - although we can’t see the finer details yet.

But are there a few shadows on the wall that are becoming evident from last week’s consumer and producer inflation reports?

To start, as I wrote last week, both housing spending and motor vehicle purchases have declined in recent months:



The longer trend in real spending on motor vehicles has been flat since the turn of the year.

A similar dynamic turns up when we compare real spending on durable goods vs. nondurable goods:



The former have trended sideways since last December, while the latter have continued to increase. This is a typical historical progression a year or so before recessions.

Let’s turn to the inflation reports now.

From the end of World War 2 until the turn of the Millennium, a YoY% increase in the producer prices for finished goods higher than consumer price increases was a realizable sign of an oncoming recession, the only significant exception being the deep slowdown of 1966:



This was the era dominated by the goods-producing sector of the economy. If producers could not pass on their increased costs to consumers, they would have to cut production and/or employment, which had the effect of causing a recession.

That hasn’t been the case since the beginning of the “China shock” at the turn of the Millenium:



Producer goods cost increases in excess of consumer price increases have been a nearly constraint feature during expansions for most of the past 25 years, although typically real GDP YoY (black) turned down several quarters after the surge in producer goods prices. Note that at present, even with the poor PPI report for last month, on a YoY basis consumer prices have still increased more.

This is likely partly due to the adoption of “just in time” inventory management, which meant that there were less inventory overhangs that needed to be cleared that in the past, and also partly due to the relative fading of the goods producing sector vs. services in the US economy.

But what of the PPI for services? We only have about 15 years of data, and few trends are evident:



There is some slight evidence that the PPI for services *may* slightly lead the CPI, and also some slight evidence from 2016, 2019, and 2021 that when PPI for services has increased more than CPI, real GDP has slowed down within a quarter or two.

If PPI continues to rise vs. CPI, I would expect to see a further slowdown, possibly showing up in the services sector more than during expansions in the past.


Saturday, August 16, 2025

Weekly Indicators for August 11 - 15 at Seeking Alpha

 

 - by New Deal democrat


My “Weekly Indicators” post is up at Seeking Alpha.

This week I quantified the difference between commodity prices in the US$ vs. a basket of all other currencies. Perhaps unsurprisingly,  the upward pressure on commodity prices appears to be all, or almost all, about weakness in the US$.

Additionally, one thing I always mention in these articles is that high frequency data will tell you about a change in direction long before you get confirmation from monthly reports. In this case, the regional Fed manufacturing indexes are showing surprising strength - food for thought.

As usual, clicking over and reading will bring you up to the virtual moment as to the state of the economy, and reward me a little bit for my efforts obtaining, collating, and categorizing the data for you.

Friday, August 15, 2025

July industrial production: meh!

 

 - by New Deal democrat


Industrial production is much less central to the US economic picture than it was before the “China shock,” since so much production moved overseas, meaning US consumers buy much more imported goods than they used to.


Still it is an important if diminished coincident indicator. This morning’s report for July can be summed up, as per the title of this post, as “meh.”

Headline industrial production (blue in the graph below) declined -0.1%% for the month, but was balanced by a +0.1% revision for June. Manufacturing production was unchanged in July, and June’s +0.3% increase was unrevised.

Nevertheless earlier this year saw a roughly a 1% increase in production, which has been maintained since:



Total production made a new post-pandemic high in June, and manufacturing production is just below its high of October 2022.

Further, industrial production is 1.4% higher than one year ago, and manufacturing production is higher by 1.6% than it was one year ago:



Although I won’t bother with a graph this month, earlier this year the big difference was the contribution of utility - especially electric utility - production, which is used both for mining crypto, and also for AI-related data mining. Which is an important reason why prices for electric power have become a problem child in the consumer inflation reports this year.

Along with retail sales, this is the second coincident positive for the economy this morning. And, to wrap it all up, the fact that both consumer spending and industrial production are holding up are important reasons why I have not gone on “recession warning” (vs. “watch”) at this point.


July retail sales: consumers party on, for now

 

 - by New Deal democrat


As per usual, retail sales are one of my favorite economic indicators, because in the past they have told us a lot about both where the economy is at present, and because consumption leads employment, so much about where the economy is likely to be in the near term future.

 The news in July was good, as nominally retail sales rose 0.7%. Additionally, June was revised higher, from 0.6% to 0.9%. Because consumer prices rose 0.3% in each of these months, that means real retail sales rose 0.6% in June and - after rounding - another 0.3% in July.

This suggests that after front-running tariffs in March and April, and then pulling back in May, consumers resumed normal activity in June and July, which is all good (just in time for the Administration to institute more tariffs in August). Here’s the graphic look, showing that in real terms August was only surpassed by March and last December:

The above graph also shows real personal spending on goods (gold, right scale), which is a broader measure and tends to shy age in similar fashion to retail spending, but won’t be reported until the end of this month.


Further, with several exceptions, most notably in 2022-23, in the past 75 years whenever real retail sales turned negative YoY, a recession was about to begin or had just begun. At present real retail sales are higher YoY by 1.2%, so there is no sign of any imminent downturn in the economy:



Finally, because consumption leads employment, here is the updated graph of real retail sales YoY, together with real personal consumption of goods compared with nonfarm payrolls (red):


Based on historical experience, real retail sales suggest that YoY jobs growth should continue to decelerate slowly in the coming months to 0.6%, which (although I won’t bother with a graph this month) in the past 40 years has only occurred during recessions.

The fly in the ointment, of course, is tariffs. Via Scott Linicome, Goldman Sachs’ preliminary analysis is that the majority of tariff price increases - 64% - have so far been eaten by US importers. Another 14% were eaten by foreign exporters. Only 22% have been passed through to US consumers. And unsurprisingly US producers whose foreign competitors have had to raise prices have taken advantage of the situation to raise their prices as well.


The above situation isn’t going to last forever. With average hourly wages having risen on average about 4% YoY recently, any price increases beyond those are going to lead to a downturn in consumption. So the big danger is still out there. It just hasn’t arrived at consumers’ doors yet.

Thursday, August 14, 2025

Producer prices for July (apparently) show the first significant negative effects of Tariff-palooza!

 

 - by New Deal democrat


Normally I don’t pay too much attention to producer prices, but occasionally they are very important - and today is one of those days. 


Here’s why. In the past, as shown in this graph going back over 50 years:



when producer prices outstrip consumer prices, that means producers aren’t able to pass on the full amount of any price increases to consumers.

Put another way, corporate profits decline. Below is a graph of the last 10+ years, with the YoY changes in final demand producer prices and consumer prices averaged quarterly, vs. corporate profits (/2 for scale):



With a lag of several quarters, once producer prices outstrip consumer prices, the YoY gains in corporate profits decelerate and even outright decline. This shows up as weaker inputs in producer prices, and the cycle restarts.

Final demand producer price gains have been approximately equal to consumer price gains since last summer. If producer prices now spike even higher, we should expect that to show up in corporate profits within another quarter or two, and possibly even this quarter.

And when corporate profits turn down, they think about scaling back hiring, and even layoff off workers.

This morning suggested that such a spike in producer costs, probably engendered mainly by tariffs, but also by the weakened US$, has begun.

Raw commodity prices (dark blue in the graph below) increased 0.7% in July, while final demand producer prices (light blue) increased 0.9%, vs. 0.3% for consumer prices (red):



This is the second month in a row of such outsized gains, and the fourth time in the last seven months.

Meaning, on a YoY% basis, commodity prices are up 2.0%, while final demand prices are up 3.3%, vs. 2.7% for consumer prices:



And the relative surge in producer prices is showing up in both goods (red in the graph below) vs. services (blue):



The July increase in final goods prices was the highest since February of last year except for this past January, while that for services was the highest going all the way back to March 2022.

On a YoY basis, except for January the increase in goods prices is the highest in over two years, and services appear to be trending somewhat higher as well:



In summary, unless something changes in the tariff situation (unlikely), this is the beginning of a profit squeeze, and will likely negatively impact “real” consumer spending as well.

Initial and continuing claims continue to trend in opposite directions

 

 - by New Deal democrat


Obviously this morning’s PPI number was the most important report of the day. I want to get to that later, but first let’s update the jobless claims situation.


The good numbers in initial claims continued, as they declined -3,000 to 224,000. The four week moving average increased 750 to 221,750. But continuing claims continued elevated, down -15,000 to 1.953 million, still close to its 3.5+ year high:



On the YoY% basis more important for forecasting, initial claims were down -1.8%, and the four week average down -6.2%, while continuing claims were up 4.8%:



As per usual, this is not recessionary and indicates continued expansion.

Comparing initial, and initial + continuing claims with the unemployment rate YoY suggests that the latter should continue essentially unchanged from year ago levels in the coming month or two:



Since the unemployment rate last August through October was 4.1% and 4.2%, that suggests it will continue in that range in the next month or two.

Why are initial and continuing claims moving in opposite directions? As I discussed last week, there are two reasonable explanations. One is that there is some unresolved seasonality at work having to do with layoffs and rehiring in education. The other is that the recent deportation jihad against Latino immigrants means they are not showing up for work, or making jobless claims, meaning that employers are hanging on to their remaining workers more tightly even if their work orders are slackening.

Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Shelter, tariffs, and “just-so” inflation indexes

 

 - by New Deal democrat


In my note yesterday about the July CPI, I noted the transition from the trend where overall inflation ex-shelter was low, and shelter was high but disinflating, to a trend where inflation ex-shelter while still low was increasing, as shelter contributed the most to disinflation. The question was, and will be going forward, how much are tariffs contributing to inflation?


In the past 24 hours I’ve seen a number of “just-so” indexes; basically, if you exclude things that aren’t going up (e.g., gas and new cars), everything else is going up! Well, duh! So I am unconvinced by those analyses.

Let me start by re-upping two of my graphs from yesterday. First, headline inflation vs. core vs. all items less shelter:



All items less shelter have been increasing at less than 2.5% for two full years. Since officially measured shelter costs have been decelerating all during that time:



the headline number has decelerated as well. But inflation ex-shelter seems to be trending higher in the past 9 months, meaning core inflation has already stopped decelerating.

So let’s divide up everything *except* shelter, which oddly enough is counted among the “services” sector of the CPI. The below graph shows the YoY% change in consumers costs of durable goods (gold), non-durable goods (red), and services excluding shelter (blue):



The cost of durable goods had actually been undergoing *deflation* during most of 2023 and 2024, but the trend has reversed higher. The inflation rate for services has also ticked up mildly in the past few months, while that for non-durable goods has been meandering around 1%. Below I show the monthly changes in the first two since the beginning of 2023 better to show those trends. I excluded non-durable goods because that would just be a squiggle:



The uptrend in both durable goods and, since last summer, services excluding shelter is apparent.

Supposedly so far producers have only passed on a small portion of tariff costs to consumers, but that won’t last forever, so - IF inflation statistics remain reliable in the coming months - I expect those costs to start showing up particularly in goods prices.

The reliability of BLS statistics going forward is a real concern, given T—-p’s nomination of E. J. Antoni to become Chairman of the BLS. Last year he authored a paper arguing that the US had been in recession since 2022, using a “unique” measure of inflation that used the Housing Affordability Index instead of OER for the shelter component.

The Housing Affordability Index consists of two components: the change in house prices, as well as the change in mortgage rates. In terms of inflation, both of those components have uses. For example, no less than Barry Ritholtz of the Big Picture has argued that Fed rate hikes actually *increase* inflation but raising the costs of mortgages in particular. And I among others have argued that replacing OER with House Cost Indexes is a better model for consumer prices (bearing in mind that in any given month or year only a small fraction of consumers make a new house purchase). Further, I have argued that because house prices lead OER by 12-18 months, the Fed should use a “House price indexed CPI” in setting rates, since that tells them where inflation is likely to be in a year or so. 

But putting those two components together to measure inflation strikes me an another “just-so” compilation, designed to arrive at a desired conclusion, i.e, Biden’s Presidency featured a long recession.

And interestingly, Antoni’s analysis begins in the year 2019. I have learned that politically motivated economic analysis often makes use of cherry-picked start or end dates - and it turns out that this is exactly such a case.

Below is a graph of house prices as measured by the FHFA, together with the Fed funds rate over the past 10 years. Remember, it is the combined effect of these that makes up the Affordability Index. And lo and behold, look at what happened in 2017 and 2018:



House prices went up 15%, and mortgage rates increased about 15% as well, from 4.20% to 4.87%.

In other words, it appears that Antoni’s own analysis would also show a recession during the entire first 2 years of T—-p’s first term. Ooops!


Tuesday, August 12, 2025

The consumer inflation transition continues, as shelter prices decelerate further, and other sectors show some re-acceleration

 

 - by New Deal democrat


The story of this month’s CPI report is summed up in the first few graphs below: the shelter portion of the index continues its slow deceleration, while the non-shelter portion of the index appears to be in a slowly rising trend. This has resulted in headline inflation trending ever so slowly lower, while core inflation shows no deceleration at all.


First, here are the month over month numbers for headline inflation (blue), core inflation (red), and inflation ex-shelter (gold) for the past two years:



Note that I am no longer including the big inflationary spike of 2021-22. We all know about that, and we know that once gas declined from $5 to $3 a gallon in late 2022, as the supply chain un-kinked, inflation ex-shelter cooled rapidly. What the above graph shows is that since then, there have been fewer outright declines in prices ex-shelter, and bigger increases. Meanwhile there has been a slight trend of lower monthly increases in headline inflation, leading to roughly steady increases in core inflation.

Here is the YoY% look at the same data:



This is the graph that best tells the story: an apparent uptrend in non-shelter inflation, a slight deceleration in headline, and over the past 12 months flat YoY core inflation.

Looking at shelter specifically, we see once again that house prices lead by roughly 12-18 months. As YoY price advances in repeat home sales have waned again (and, per the experimental new and total tenant rent index I updated several weeks ago, new rents have gone sharply negative YoY, leading the total to continue its deceleration), shelter inflation has resumed its gradual deceleration:



On a monthly basis, both fictitious owners’ rent as well as actual tenants’ rent increased 0.3%, and YoY they advanced 4.1 and 3.5% respectively. These are the lowest YoY% increases since the beginning of 2022.

Underneath these big trends there are some other notable ripples in the pond.

Transportation services (mainly car repairs and insurance) lag the prices of new and used cars. The former have steadied for the past 2.5 years, while the latter decreased into last year, but have started to increase again, and are now up 30% compared to their pre-pandemic level:



Since used vehicles are something of a substitution good for new vehicles, this suggests renewed pressure on consumers - perhaps because of the interest rates on car loans, and perhaps also because of the pressure on their loans generally due to the sudden lapse of student loan payment abatements.

This has resulted in price increases of over 5% YoY for motor vehicle repairs and insurance, and in the past several months the pace has turned back up:



Looking at a couple of other problem children, recently price increases in medical care services have also re-accelerated, and did so again this month:


And prices for meat in particular are up almost 6% YoY, although inflation in the protein and dairy complex as a whole has cooled somewhat:



Finally, although I won’t use graphs, I did spend some time looking for specific impacts from tariffs. At first glance, so far they appear to be sporadic. Banana prices are up 4.3% YoY, and coffee prices up 14.5%.  Contrarily appliance prices declned -0.3% for the month, and are down -1.1% YoY.

Last month I wrote that consumer inflation was in a transitionary period. This continued to be the case in July, as shelter continues its disinflation, while other products and services have begun to re-accelerate in price. The widespread further increases in tariffs that were announced at the beginning of this month will only add to that acceleration over the coming months.