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Government Worker Wage Growth Hits Record High As Fed's Favorite Inflation Signal Slows

Tyler Durden's Photo
by Tyler Durden
Friday, Jan 26, 2024 - 01:43 PM

One of The Fed's favorite inflation indicators - Core PCE Deflator - tumbled to +2.9% YoY in December (below the 3.0% exp and down from 3.2% in November) - the lowest since March 2021.

Headline PCE Deflator rose 0.2% MoM, holding at +2.6% YoY in December ...

Source: Bloomberg

While Durable Goods YoY deflation continued in December, non-durable goods costs actually accelerated YoY. Services inflation slowed modestly...

Source: Bloomberg

But on a MoM basis, Services costs accelerated...

Source: Bloomberg

Even more focused, from The Fed's perspective, is Services inflation ex-Shelter, and the PCE-equivalent shows that it has broken down from its 'sticky' levels to its lowest since March 2021 (thanks in larg epart to base effects). But, we did see a 0.3% MoM jump, considerably bigger than the last few months increases....

Source: Bloomberg

Under the hood, SuperCore PCE inflation indicators are all ticking back higher MoM...

Source: Bloomberg

Income and Spending both rose MoM in December but spending significantly outpaced incomes (and expectations) - income +0.3% MoM (as expected), spending jumped 0.7% MoM (above 0.5% exp)...

Source: Bloomberg

Spending is up 5.7% YoY, well ahead of income growth of only 4.7%...

Source: Bloomberg

While wage growth overall was modest, it is government wage growth that is driving it - now at a record high!

Source: Bloomberg

And on the back of that, the savings rate tumbled from 4.1% of DPI to 3.7%...

Does that seem like a good thing?

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: Bloomberg

Acyclical Core PCE inflation remains extremely high, although it has fallen from its highs.

Is The (apolitical) Fed really going to cut rates by 140bps next year with a background of strong growth (GDP) and still high Acyclical inflation?

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