- by New Deal democrat
Still nerdy after all these years
- by New Deal democrat
- by New Deal democrat
- by New Deal democrat
Since I posted earlier about why I follow jobless claims so closely, let me briefly restate why I pay a lot of attention to real retail sales.
- by New Deal democrat
This might be a good time to reiterate why I post each week on jobless claims, and what my system is.
- by New Deal democrat
December consumer prices indicate that we are leaving the immediate post-covid era and seeing a rebalancing of sectors, as sectors that declined sharply in the past several years rebound.
As in November, the only two categories of “hot” numbers showing price increases of 4.0% a year or more are two laggards: shelter and transportation services. All of the former problem children are now more or less in line.
As per usual, the biggest dichotomy in the numbers is shelter vs. ex-shelter, but let’s start with the headline and core CPI readings. For the record the former increased 0.4% for the month, while the latter increased only 0.2%. On a YoY basis, headline prices are up 2.9%, an increase of 0.5% from their 2.4% low three months ago. Core prices excluding food and energy are up 3.2% YoY:
Now let’s look at CPI for shelter vs. ex-shelter:
Shelter prices increased 0.3% for the month. Everything else all together rose a sharp 0.5%. On a YoY basis, shelter increased a little under 4.6%, its lowest such reading since January 2022. Despite the “hot” monthly reading, all other prices increased 1.9% YoY, the 20th month in a row they have risen less than 2.5%.
As it has been for several years, in the broadest terms inflation in excess of the Fed target remains almost all about shelter.
Within shelter, both actual rents and “owners equivalent rent,” the fictitious measure of house prices, increased 0.3%. On a YoY basis, rent increased 4.3% while OER increased 4.8%. Both of these are the lowest since early 2022:
While the deceleration in shelter inflation has been slow, it is continuing as forecast from both the leading house price and new apartment rent indexes. To reiterate what I wrote last month, the Philadelphia Fed’s experimental new and all rent indexes, which are designed to lead the CPI for rents, for the last two quarters have forecast a decline below 4% YoY, and at the current pace of deceleration, that forecast could come to fruition within the next 2 to 3 months.
Turning to the other remaining problem child, transportation services (mainly insurance and repair costs); recall that these lag vehicle prices. In December, new vehicle prices increased 0.5%, and used car prices increased 1.2%. These have been strong monthly numbers in th past few months. But on a YoY basis, new car prices are down -0.4%, and used car prices down -3.3%. In other words, this is a rebound from the pullback since 2023 [Note: instead of YoY, graph is normed to 100 as of just before the pandemic, better to show the surge in prices and the stagnation or decline afterward]:
In December transportation services costs increased 0.5%. On a YoY basis, they rose from 7.1% to 7.3%, which is still nearly the “best” reading in 3 years:
Within transportation services, motor vehicle repairs are up 6.2% while insurance is up 11.3%.This is the real problem child is motor (for which unfortunately FRED does not provide a graph).
What the above all means is that if we were to take out the two areas that we know lag, shelter and transportation services, consumer inflation would probably be up only something like 1% YoY.
- by New Deal democrat
I generally don’t pay too much attention to producer prices, but there are a couple of exceptions. One exception is that sometimes producer prices lead consumer prices by a number of months. That hasn’t been the case recently. But the other exception is that producer prices can tell us whether profit margins are being squeezed or not. *That* is relevant at the moment.
- by New Deal democrat
Friday’s jobs report was an excellent one for Joe Biden’s Presidential term to end on. In the past 4 years, 17 million jobs have been created. Even if we take out 2021 as being a COVID rebound year, in the past 3 years there were 9.8 million new jobs, an average of 272,000 jobs per month. Meanwhile the unemployment rate declined from 6.7% at the end of 2020 to 4.1%. It rose 0.2% from 3.9% three years ago, ranging from a low of 3.4% to a high of 4.2%, which is still an excellent record. Real average nonsupervisory wages are up 0.6% from December 2020, and 1.3% from December 2021 - not so great, but still positive. And since average wages in 2020 were distorted by layoffs mainly affecting lower income workers, if we measure from December 2019, real wages have risen 4.8%.