Government Wage Growth Hits Record High As Fed’s Favorite Inflation Indicator Tumbles


One of The Fed’s favorite inflation indicators – Core PCE Deflator – tumbled to +3.2% YoY (below the 3.3% exp and down from a downwardly revised 3.4% in October) – the lowest since April 2021.Headline CPI also slowed more than expected, to +2.6% YoY in November (from +2.9% in Oct)Source: BloombergThe headline PCE Deflator FELL 0.1% MoM – the first monthly decline since April 2020. The drop was all driven by Goods (durable and Non-durable)…Source: BloombergOn a six-month annualized basis, ‘mission accomplished‘…Even more focused, is the Fed’s view on Services inflation ex-Shelter, and the PCE-equivalent shows that it has broken down from its ‘sticky’ levels to its lowest since March 2021Source: BloombergYear-over-Year Goods deflation continued for the 6th month in a row…Source: BloombergBoth income and spending rose MoM in November, +0.4% and +0.2% respectively.Source: BloombergWhich pushed the YoY spending and income growth even faster...Source: BloombergThe savings rate ticked up from 4.0% to 4.1% in November…On the income side, it’s all government-driven gains…

  • Private wages up 5.0% YoY after 4.1% in October, which was the lowest in three years

  • Government wages up 9.0% YoY, matching all time high

  • Finally, while the markets are exuberant at the disinflation – and the coming Fed rate-cut avalanche – we do note that it’s not all sunshine and unicorns. The vast majority of the reduction in inflation has been ‘cyclical’…Source: BloombergAcyclical Core PCE inflation remains extremely high, although it has fallen from its highs.Is The (apolitical) Fed really going to cut rates by 160bps next year with this background?More By This Author:79% Of India’s GDP Is Generated By Family-Owned BusinessesVisualizing The Global Coffee TradeWhat’s Your US Income Percentile?

    Reviews

    • Total Score 0%
    User rating: 0.00% ( 0
    votes )



    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *