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progree

(11,762 posts)
3. Graphs and summary table of all 3 inflation measures (PCE, CPI, PPI)
Fri Sep 27, 2024, 09:24 AM
Sep 2024

The inflation situation as of the release of the PCE Inflation Index (Fed's preferred inflation gauge) on 9/27/24. Here is a summary table followed by the graphs.

CME Fedwatch tool (predicts Fed interest rate changes):https://www.cmegroup.com/markets/interest-rates/cme-fedwatch-tool.html

I annualize them all to be easy to compare to each other, and to compare to the FED's 2% goal. I use the actual index values rather than the one-digit changes that are commonly reported in the media. Links to the data are with the graphs.

ALL the numbers are the seasonally adjusted ones

The "1 month" number is the change from July to August expressed as an annualized number. Except the PCE is the increase from June to July, also annualized.

The "3 month" number is the growth over the last 3 months (and then annualized). It is calculated based on the change in the index number between the latest one and the one 3 months previous. e.g. if the latest index value is 304 and the one 3 months previous is 300, then the 3 month increase is 1.333333%
. . . (304/300 = 1.01333333 => [subtract 1 and multiply by 100%] => 1.333333%)
Annualized, it is 5.4%
. . . (1.01333333^4 = 1.0544095 => [subtract 1 and multiply by 100%] => 5.44095% => 5.4%).
. . . Most people just multiply the 3 month increase by 4 to annualize it: 1.333333%*4 = 5.333333% => 5.3% which isn''t technically correct (it leaves out compounding) but it is close for small percentage changes.

"Regular" is the "headline" number that has "everything"

"Core" is the regular with food and energy removed (The Fed prefers this as a basis for projecting FUTURE inflation)

Finally, the main summary table
All are seasonally adjusted and ANNUALIZED
PCE-Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index (Fed's favorite inflation measure)
CPI-Consumer Price Index (retail)
PPI-Producer Price Index (Wholesale prices)
Links to the data are with the graphs below



Average real (i.e. inflation-adjusted) hourly earnings are up over the past 2 years and are above the pre-pandemic level:
. . . # Real average hourly earnings of production and non-supervisory workers: https://data.bls.gov/timeseries/CES0500000032
. . . # Real average hourly earnings of private sector workers: https://data.bls.gov/timeseries/CES0500000013

And now the graphs, in the following order:

* Core PCE and Regular PCE (Core PCE is the Fed's favorite for projecting FUTURE inflation), released 9/27/24

* Core CPI and Regular CPI

* Wholesale inflation - Core PPI and Regular PPI

CORE PCE through AUGUST that came out 9/27/24 (PCE=Personal Consumption Expenditures price index)
CORE PCE (seasonally adjusted): https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/PCEPILFE
BEA.gov News release: https://www.bea.gov/ and click on "Personal Income and Outlays" or "Personal Income"

This is the one that the Fed weighs most heavily. The Fed weigh the PCE more heavily than the CPI. And in both cases, they weigh the CORE measures higher than the regular headline measures for projecting FUTURE inflation



Regular PCE through AUGUST that came out 9/27/24
Regular PCE (seasonally adjusted): https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/PCEPI
BEA.gov News release: https://www.bea.gov/ and click on "Personal Income and Outlays" or "Personal Income"




CORE CPI through August that came out 9/11/24
CORE CPI (seasonally adjusted) http://data.bls.gov/timeseries/CUSR0000SA0L1E
BLS CPI news release: https://www.bls.gov/news.release/cpi.nr0.htm



The Regular aka Headline CPI through August that came out 9/11/24 (CPI=Consumer Price Index)
Regular CPI (seasonally adjusted) https://data.bls.gov/timeseries/CUSR0000SA0
BLS CPI news release: https://www.bls.gov/news.release/cpi.nr0.htm



Some Additional CPI Series of Interest
Shelter, which is pretty much all rent -- either regular rent or "owners' equivalent rent", has been a problematic issue -- because changes in new rents take several months before they appreciably move the CPI (because of the inertia of 11 months of older rents). It is the largest component of the Core CPI and one of the largest of the regular CPI. Through August, shelter remained elevated at 0.4% month over month for several months, except for a smaller 0.2% increase in June., and a larger 0.5% increase in August. Year-over-year, shelter is up 5.2%

Shelter: https://data.bls.gov/timeseries/CUSR0000SAH1

Core Inflation less Shelter: https://data.bls.gov/timeseries/CUSR0000SA0L12E
^--This is up 0.0% for 3 months in a row, followed by +0.1% in August. The 3 month annualized average is +0.0% (compare to core of +2.1%)

Click on "More Formatting Options" on the upper right hand of screen, and on the page that appears, choose some or all of: "1-Month Percent Change", "3-Month Percent Change" and "12-Month Percent Change".

Headline CPI and Fed Rate Action

November 2019 through August 2024

The first tentative little quarter point rate increase was March 17, 2022, 12 months after year-over-year inflation went north of 2% in March 2021, and had reached 8.5%.

I'm fond of the 3 month averages as they are an average of 3 data points (so can't be easily dismissed as a "one off", unlike a single month-over-month figure), and they have much more recency than 12 month averages (yoy). I think of them as kinda a smoothed version of month-to-month.

FedFunds Target Rate (I used the upper end of the 0.25% width bracket): https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/openmarket.htm



WHOLESALE INFLATION (PPI - the Producer Price Index)

https://www.bls.gov/news.release/ppi.nr0.htm

As for which core PPI measure, since the BLS highlights the one below (without food, energy, and trade services) in its reporting (as opposed to the one without food and energy), then I guess I should do likewise. Trade services bounce around a lot from month to month, so I think excluding them from a core measure is the right thing to do.

CORE PPI (excluding food, energy, trade services) through August that came out 9/12/24:
CORE PPI (seasonally adjusted) http://data.bls.gov/timeseries/WPSFD49116



===========================================================

Regular PPI through August that came out 9/12/24 ( includes "everything" ):
Regular PPI (seasonally adjusted) http://data.bls.gov/timeseries/WPSFD4

Recommendations

1 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

"soft landing" may be understating it. nt BootinUp Sep 2024 #1
Has Donnie placed an order for a case of ketchup to celebrate sinkingfeeling Sep 2024 #2
Graphs and summary table of all 3 inflation measures (PCE, CPI, PPI) progree Sep 2024 #3
I felt the rumble BumRushDaShow Sep 2024 #4
But some GOP-MAGA Latino voters in Arizona still complain kansasobama Sep 2024 #5
Bunch of B.S. imo CountAllVotes Sep 2024 #6
I can relate to that bucolic_frolic Sep 2024 #7
That is how I see it too CountAllVotes Sep 2024 #9
Where are you? BumRushDaShow Sep 2024 #10
One could spend $9/lb on ground beef in Seattle. maxsolomon Sep 2024 #11
I think some of the name-brand Wagyu here at my market BumRushDaShow Sep 2024 #13
Perhaps in some housing districts, where housing has gone up thru the roof, e.g., in FL, other places. These SWBTATTReg Sep 2024 #17
Nothing in your OP or its linked article is inconsistent with ground beef being $9/lb somewhere progree Sep 2024 #12
Actually yes - the price "rise" (slope of the line) is LESS than it has been in the past BumRushDaShow Sep 2024 #14
There are breakdowns into broad and sometimes narrow categories progree Sep 2024 #15
I don't think they would have that data BumRushDaShow Sep 2024 #16
And then look what I found BumRushDaShow Sep 2024 #29
It was all staged--it's a hoax!!!! COL Mustard Sep 2024 #8
I'm on a fixed income. The Mouth Sep 2024 #18
+1 CountAllVotes Sep 2024 #19
Well, the chances of prices going back to 2019 levels is almost zero. Elessar Zappa Sep 2024 #20
Prices are up 19.3% since 8/2019 according to the PCE, and 22.7% according to the CPI progree Sep 2024 #22
What should've been done was a flat amount increase for people on SS, SSDI, and SSI. Elessar Zappa Sep 2024 #23
I'm on a "fixed income" too (as a retiree, with any COLA subject to the whims of fucking Congress) BumRushDaShow Sep 2024 #21
COLA CountAllVotes Sep 2024 #25
That inflation surge destroyed my family, essentially The Mouth Sep 2024 #26
Agree CountAllVotes Sep 2024 #27
'The party has other priorities than old people on fixed incomes" BumRushDaShow Sep 2024 #28
Well, I wish the choir was yelling at the pastor The Mouth Sep 2024 #30
Is the real message this? CountAllVotes Sep 2024 #24
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