Core inflation did not change much in August, according to the Federal Reserve’s major forecasting tool. This could keep the central bank at a pace to cut interest rates.
The Personal Consumption Expense Price Index recorded an increase of 0.3% that month, bringing annual headline inflation to 2.7%, the Commerce Department reported Friday.
Excluding food and energy, the price level for core PCE was 2.9% per year after an increase of 0.2% for the month.
Headline’s annual inflation rate rose slightly from 2.6% in July, but the core rate was the same.
All figures were consistent with Dow Jones’ consensus predictions.
The number of spending and income was slightly higher than expected.
Personal income increased by 0.4% that month, while consumer spending accelerated at a rate of 0.6%. Both were 0.1 percentage points above their respective estimates.
The Fed aims for 2% inflation, but it is unlikely to change courses for policymakers who last week showed they would see two more quarterly percentage points cuts by the end of the year.
While central banks incorporate a broad dashboard of data points, PCE uses PCE as a predictive measure of inflation, as it offers a broader view than other reports such as the Consumer Price Index and takes into account changes in consumer spending habits.
Stock market futures increased profits after the report, but the Treasury was framed.
The report further shows that President Donald Trump’s tariffs only had a limited pass-through effect on consumer prices. While many economists expected Trump’s vast taxation to reach the prices of juice, businesses rely on mixing pre-duty inventory accumulation and cost absorption measures to limit the impact.
Product prices rose 0.1%, while services rose 0.3%. Food showed a profit of 0.5%, while energy goods and services jumped 0.8%. Housing expenses rose 0.4%.
Furthermore, the data showed that consumers are resilient despite rounds of tariffs and continue to spend strong so that their income is supported. Individual savings also increased monthly, rising to 4.6%, up 0.2 percentage points.
“We’re committed to providing a great opportunity to help you,” said Chris Rupkey, Chief Economist at FWDBonds. “Summer was an era of consumer revenge spending after retreating and falling from shops and malls during the uncertainty and fear created by the White House tariff rollout in April and May.”
Federal Reserve officials, including chairman Jerome Powell, say the possible scenario for tariffs is that they are boosting prices at once, not the long-term cause of underlying inflation. However, some policymakers continue to express reservations and see a limited room for further interest rate cuts.
The market is betting strongly on rate cuts in October, but there is a bit of enthusiasm for another move in December. The Federal Open Market Committee approved a quarter-point reduction in the Fed fund ratio last week. This is the first easing in the year that reduced the benchmark to a target range of 4%-4.25%.