Date:
Author:
Stefan Gerlach

The recent burst of inflation in the US and in many other countries has led investors to wonder whether the entire inflation environment has changed.

In this Macro Flash Note, EFG chief economist Stefan Gerlach reviews yesterday’s CPI release.

 Annual US year-on-year headline (or overall) consumer price inflation in January fell for the seventh month in a row to 6.4% from 6.5%, and core inflation (ex food and energy) fell for the fourth month in a row to 5.6% from 5.7%. While inflation thus was a little stronger than expected by many observers, it is evident that US inflation is slowing: headline inflation is at its lowest level since October 2021 and core inflation at its lowest level since December 2021.

NC CPI Jan1.png
Figure 1. Headline inflation
NC CPI Jan2.png
Figure 2. Core inflation

Source: BLS. Data as of 14 February 2023.

The figures above illustrate that the behaviours of headline and core inflation are strikingly different. While month-on-month headline inflation has been very low since last summer, month-on-month core inflation has averaged 0.36% since October. That is far above the 0.17% month-on-month rate needed to lower inflation to the Fed’s 2% target. Thus, further disinflation will be needed before the Fed is likely to pivot.

As in the recent past, the reason inflation is not falling more rapidly is mainly that the shelter component remains very strong. It is a large part of headline (34%) and core inflation (43%) and continues to be very high (7.9% year-on-year and 0.7% month-on-month).

The shelter component differs from most other CPI components in that it reflects contracts entered in past months, as opposed to in January. Looking instead at the Zillow index for new rental contracts agreed in January, it is clear that there is little price pressure on new rental contracts (see figure below). This suggests that the rate of increase of shelter prices is likely to subside in coming months, lowering core, and therefore headline, inflation.

NC CPI Jan3.png
Figure 3. Shelter, month-on-month

Source: BLS and Zillow. Data as of 14 February 2023.

Overall, inflation is falling in the US, but not as fast as the Fed would like. Expect further interest rate increases at the Fed meetings in March and May, and perhaps even in June.

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