A nice surprise for US inflation


Key points:

  • US inflation was softer than the market expected in October
  • The peak of US inflation could be behind us
  • Energy and food likely to remain upside risk

US Consumer Price Index (CPI), while still hot, was below market expectations with headline inflation continuing to slow from 8.2% down to 7.7% on an annual basis. This suggests that peak US inflation is likely behind us. The markets reacted positively to this especially as the monthly number for October had been anticipated as being 0.1% higher than it was; it came in at 0.4% including food and oil. Meanwhile, core inflation in October rose 6.3%, on an annual basis, with a monthly increase that was smaller than that experienced in September.1

Looking into the numbers there are some trends that provide reasons for optimism:

  1. Goods prices fell by -0.08% essentially due to lower car prices but it suggests the easing of supply chain pressures. Given that goods prices have been the most affected by Covid-related inflation, this print could mean that it is gradually dissipating.2
  2. Below the surface of core inflation are signs of softening with several indices falling, led by medical care. While rent inflation has continued to increase with a solid 0.8% monthly jump it is some consolation that the US Federal Reserve (Fed) knows that rent inflation is a lagging indicator. Tackling lagging inflation from shelter will be key, especially as it is likely to remain hot for some months. This is even more prevalent if the latest numbers from medical care mean that that inflation contributor is rolling over. 

However, it is not all a story of optimism with food and energy prices remaining hot and an upside risk.  Particularly disappointing was energy inflation which, after three months of negative contribution, was positive again in October. Along with food and energy, labor and commodities still look to be upside risks for US inflation going forward.

What does this all suggest?

Inflation was weaker but only an isolated number so far and for the market’s mood to continue to be positive, it will need further inflation cool-down to be sustained. The reason why the market has reacted so positively to the inflation release, despite it remaining elevated on an annual basis, is because shelter was close to being the only significant source of inflation. As shelter has a 30% weight in core inflation this means out of the monthly +0.3% increase in core inflation, 0.24% came from shelter which, as a lagging indicator, suggests inflation may be slowing.3

Cut the numbers a different way and core inflation – less food, energy, and energy services – was actually -0.1% on the month, its lowest reading since March 2020 Covid crisis.4 We would expect with this inflation release that the Fed will proceed with reducing the pace of rate increases in the coming months and eventually pause boosting demand for financial assets.

We continue to expect a moderate inflation slow-down with upside risks from food & energy prices. As the chart shows, although US inflation should be past its peak, monthly inflation numbers do remain positive with headline inflation at +0.4% and core at +0.3%. So, while Covid-related inflation is slowly going away and we expect inflation to moderate, we continue to expect positive monthly numbers, hence a slow slow-down. 

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