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Here Are Some Signs U.S. Inflation Is Drifting Below Fed’s Goal

Here Are Some Signs U.S. Inflation Is Drifting Below Fed's Goal

(Bloomberg) -- Just when you thought U.S. inflation was stabilizing around the Federal Reserve’s 2 percent goal, it’s getting pulled back down again.

In contrast to the resounding success on their maximum-employment target, policy makers may have to wait a while before declaring victory on inflation as recent reports show price pressures are cooling off instead.

The slowdown -- covering the Fed’s preferred price gauge, surveys of consumers and a poll of manufacturers -- is hard to ignore at a time central bank officials emphasize that their decisions will be increasingly data dependent. The path of 2019 interest-rate hikes looks less certain beyond a widely-expected move in December, which would be the fourth this year.

Markets anticipate a slower tightening pace than the Fed has flagged. On Monday, a section of the U.S. Treasury yield curve inverted for the first time in more than a decade, while five-year inflation expectations were near the lowest in more than a year. The following charts highlight what’s happening with inflation:

Here Are Some Signs U.S. Inflation Is Drifting Below Fed’s Goal

While the Labor Department’s report on October consumer prices was mixed, the latest results for the Fed’s own preferred price measure, which is tied to consumer spending, came in weak. Even though the so-called PCE gauge met the central bank’s 2 percent goal, it failed to accelerate as economists had forecast, and has softened since mid-2018.

Here Are Some Signs U.S. Inflation Is Drifting Below Fed’s Goal

Excluding volatile food and energy costs, PCE inflation cooled to the slowest since February, bringing the three-month annualized rate to 1.1 percent. The Fed monitors the core measure for a better read on underlying price trends, but it has topped 2 percent just once this year on an unrounded basis.

Watching it is even more important at a time oil prices have plunged and show little sign of rebounding, a factor that weighed on a measure of prices paid for materials by manufacturers: that index fell by the most in six years in November, Institute for Supply Management data showed Monday.

“As always, our decisions on monetary policy will be designed to keep the economy on track in light of the changing outlook for jobs and inflation,” Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said last week in New York.

Here Are Some Signs U.S. Inflation Is Drifting Below Fed’s Goal

Americans’ views of inflation expectations for the next 12 months also weakened in November from the prior month, according to a University of Michigan survey. The gauge has been softening since matching a three-year high in August, though there’s concern the tariff war with China may lead to higher costs for everyday items used by households. The anticipated inflation rate over the next five to 10 years rose.

While households benefit from contained inflation and will find comfort in lower fuel costs, the Fed tends to be wary of subdued longer-term price expectations taking hold. That’s because if consumers believe inflation will stay low, it becomes hard for businesses to raise prices, and in turn, they shy away from raising wages, which then makes consumers even more resistant to accepting higher prices.

Here Are Some Signs U.S. Inflation Is Drifting Below Fed’s Goal

Meanwhile, worker pay -- which tends to feed into inflation -- has also been moving up only gradually and is yet to show any major pickup even though the job market is tight and the unemployment rate is the lowest since 1969. That level is already well beyond what’s considered consistent with full employment, the Fed’s other goal.

To contact the reporter on this story: Shobhana Chandra in Washington at schandra1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Scott Lanman at slanman@bloomberg.net, Jeff Kearns

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