What to Expect From the Fed After January PCE Overshoots Forecast

 | Feb 27, 2023 03:02

What can the Fed do in a sticky inflation situation?

January’s Personal Consumer Expenditure (PCE) index came in hot at 5.4% vs. the expected 5% inflation rate. The market is already in a frenzy as investors speculate on the Federal Reserve’s next move. But what is the Fed’s actual maneuvering space?

h2 January PCE Higher than Expected/h2

On the heels of last month’s market rally, the January Effect seems to have arrived at full steam this year, resulting in a significantly higher Personal Consumption Expenditure price index. As the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation metric, PCE for January went up 0.6%, at 5.4% vs. the expected 5.0%.

Likewise, the core PCE, which discounts volatile food and energy prices, exceeded expectations at 4.7% vs. the forecasted at 4.3%. Over the long run, core PCE gives a clearer picture of the underlying inflation trend as it removes distorting price fluctuations in food and energy. This puts the inflation rate in a sticky, if not out of control, mode.

Another signal to this effect is the Producer Price Index (PPI), as a measure of average selling prices by domestic producers. PPI serves as an early inflationary warning signal because it indicates that businesses pay more for necessary inputs that produce goods ending up on retailers’ tables. For January, PPI for final demand goods rose by +1.2% monthly, while for services, PPI rose by +0.4%. Annually, PPI climbed by +6%.