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Vanishing inflation bolsters case for Fed easing

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By Pedro da Costa and Jason Lange

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - It has only been a few days since the Federal Reserve adopted a formal goal for inflation, and already policymakers are missing their target.

The U.S. central bank's preferred measure of inflation sank to its lowest level in more than a year in the fourth quarter, data showed on Friday.

Growth in the government's personal consumption expenditure index, which the Fed now targets at 2.0 percent, dropped to a 0.7 percent annual rate, about a third of its pace during the previous three months.

Of course, the Fed aims to hit its target over the longer run and will be willing to look through often volatile food and energy prices.

But even stripping those costs out, the inflation rate fell sharply to 1.1 percent over the past three months, a potentially troubling sign that the trend is not the Fed's friend.

With unemployment still at an elevated 8.5 percent, Friday's data could buttress the case within the central bank for taking new action to boost the economy.

"Clearly, much work remains to achieve the Fed's dual mandate of maximum sustainable employment in the context of price stability," said New York Fed President William Dudley, who has hinted he supports doing more to lower borrowing costs.

"Inflation has retreated and may be headed down further," Dudley told reporters on Friday.

PRIMING THE MONEY PUMP

The Fed's policy-setting committee is divided between officials who want to pump more money into the economy and others known as hawks who worry inflation could get out of hand.

Currently, many investors think the Fed will try to lower borrowing costs further this year through "quantitative easing," which entails purchasing securities on the market in order to bring down interest rates for mortgages and business loans.

Economists at 12 of 18 primary dealers, the large financial institutions that do business directly with the Fed, said the central bank would do further quantitative easing, a Reuters poll showed. The poll was conducted after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's news conference on Wednesday.

If that happens, this would amount to "QE3" or the Fed's third round of quantitative easing since November 2008 when its first QE program was launched about two months after Lehman Brothers collapsed, during the depths of the financial crisis.

The inflation reading "very much supports the idea from the non-hawkish core of the committee that inflation has a downward trajectory right now," said Michael Hanson, an economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

Still, some temporary factors likely pushed inflation numbers lower during the fourth quarter, which could keep officials from rushing into more monetary stimulus.

Prices for durable goods fell at a 2.7 percent annual rate, which analysts attributed to automakers recovering from supply- chain disruptions created by an earthquake in Japan in March.

That suggests while inflation is well below the Fed's target, the economy does not appear poised to slip into deflation, a debilitating spiral of falling prices and wages. Fears of deflation were a major justification for a $600 billion quantitative easing program in late 2010.

"This isn't really deflationary," Paul Ashworth, economist at Capital Economics in Toronto, said of the price data.

Nonetheless, the sharp easing in inflation potentially gives the Fed more room to ramp up efforts to boost employment. The PCE price index will likely rise just 1.4 percent this year, said Jeff Greenberg, an economist at Nomura in New York.

The jobless rate, however, remains several percentage points higher than where most Fed officials would prefer it to be, even though it has fallen in recent months. In December, it stood at 8.5 percent.

With this in mind, both Greenberg and Ashworth expect the Fed will launch a new bond-buying program by mid-year.

One factor that could force policymakers to spring to action more quickly is a possible worsening of Europe's banking crisis, which could drag large U.S. financial institutions into a rut and trigger a new credit crunch.

Argued Hanson of BofA-Merrill: "That's the wild card and that would potentially change the way the Fed reacts."

(Editing by Jan Paschal)

 

45 comments

  • Aggie in CA  •  Santa Clara, California  •  1 month 17 days ago
    Using the Fed's 'favorite' index measure? What? Inflation down? What? What planet do they live on? This is a sorry excuse, being invented apparently as we speak, to use more quantitative easing. NO, NO, NO, NO!!!!!!
    The Fed, Bernanke, and the bankster cartel need to be stopped NOW!!!!! No more bailouts, of any kind. NO!!!
  • the skipper  •  Sunnyvale, California  •  1 month 17 days ago
    what vanishing inflation? what crap!
  • J  •  1 month 17 days ago
    Vanishing inflation? LOL

    Where do these Bozos come from?
  • wiprguy  •  Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin  •  1 month 17 days ago
    Where the hell do these guys shop? Coffee's up, fruit's up, gasoline's up, milk's up,health insurance premiums are up ..oh sure, car prices were down, but who could afford one?? What planet do these guys live on?
  • Just  •  Hampton, Virginia  •  1 month 17 days ago
    Kick all current Congress out this November. Elect ALL NEW members.
  • Amogayvhi  •  Richardson, Texas  •  1 month 17 days ago
    Vanishing inflation? Are they smoking crack? VANISHING INFLATION? EVERYTHING IS GOING UP, CAR TIRES, BATTERIES, RENTALS, CLOTHES, UTILITY BILLS! AND THESE IDIOTS WANT TO MAKE OUR MONEY WORSE EVEN LESS! THE TRAITOROUS DIRTBAG "HELICOPTER" BEN BERNAKE MUST NOT BE ALLOWED TO DESTROY OR CURRENCY! COMPLAIN TO YOU CONGRESSMAN AND ANYONE ELSE WHO WILL LISTEN!
  • proposedsolutionsblogspot  •  1 month 17 days ago
    I wish all of you would join with me in contacting your representatives and demand that Bernanke be impeached.

    If you fail to do so, you will face surmounting problems that I doubt many of you are ready for.
  • ringo  •  Mars, Pennsylvania  •  1 month 17 days ago
    these guys must live in mexico......not much inflation there
  • Bermonkey  •  1 month 17 days ago
    Is it really that easy, just print money? Seems too good to be true with consequences probably. I wouldn't mind deflation, but Fed won't let you have lower prices because it hurts their expensive sucker homeowners. Bernanke has no emotion, but he is doing this for his buds, not you.
  • james  •  Oak Park, Illinois  •  1 month 17 days ago
    I was far richer in the 70s than I am now. I make three times now what I did then. Who are these people trying to kid?........or con?
  • Thomas Paine Esq.  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  1 month 17 days ago
    Wait a minute. The three biggest items in every normal individual's budget are food, transportation and shelter. Of course tood and fuel are excluded from "official" government figures, even though they are both up quite a bit That leaves housing. Yes the cost of purchasing a house is down from a couple of years ago. However rents are going up, up and up. Here in Phoenix, house rental rates apparently now are running more than 10% above what they were a year ago. Deflation? Not in the real world. How did we ever get saddled with these mental midgets, who claim to be so omniscient, while they really are so totally incompetent?
  • FredF  •  1 month 17 days ago
    Debilitating deflation, where the wages and salary of the poor and middle class can buy more instead of less. Yes, truly horrible.
  • David  •  Gilbert, South Carolina  •  1 month 17 days ago
    Banks/wall street standing with the ole hand out once again!!! Why no give us 5k in a tax return this year? That would mean I only owed 1k intead of 6k... BTW I'm not rich I'm just/was lower middle class and another year of getting raped on taxs..... Will take me another year to pay my taxes...
    Oh if someone wants to complain that I'm outside my means... Nope I own my house free and clear so I don't get to write off all that intrest yall pay on your house... So our gov gives you a tax break to be in debt but if you do things the right way you get f'd.
  • Allen  •  1 month 17 days ago
    when there is a DECLINING trend in wages, inflation occurs as people have fewer dollars to buy increasing more expensive goods. DO ANY OF THE BANKSTER FED hoodlums even have a clue?
  • proposedsolutionsblogspot  •  1 month 17 days ago
    Listen people, this is a matter of calculus, or rate of change. The following paragraph contains some math stuff, but I tried to make it simple.

    The inflation rate may or may not presently be contained, but it does not mean inflation didn't already affect us. Whether the current rate of inflation is zero, or higher, both are bad because of what the rate of inflation did up to this time. PLEASE REREAD as this is an important point you all need to be made aware of. It's how Bernanke explains away the inflation rate without dealing with the effects of inflation up to the present. In calculus, the rate of inflation would help describe a curve that increases (the slope) and the height of the curve shows the accumulated inflation (no longer rate) that the Fed wants you to totally be ignorant of. As you see, even if the curve levels off, the total amount of inflation still exists and does not go away.

    Suppose your wages are stuck for the past ten years, for ease of demonstration. In 2000 a month's worth of food cost you $50, and today it costs $100. If the rate of inflation right at this moment was even zero, would it be a sign of good times? No. As you see, too much inflation already occurred. We need deflationary measures to undo the inflated prices but the Fed, in catering to the wealthy, will never let that happen as it would reward savers and hurt those who wish to make money off of selling you products you really could live without.

    See proposed solutions site. See also how we can save $17 trillion over 20 years by simply cutting some of the government employees and paying the remainder at the level of the private sector. See how the job situation must be dealt with as we are dealing with a foreign labor force and business efficiencies, neither of which are properly being addressed.

    I am here for all of you. I even developed a new stock market system that is highly stable, manipulation resistant, and actually about investing as opposed to the musical chairs game that it is today. The SEC has it but won't impose it on the stock exchanges. It's in the book "God Gave You a Brain; Use It!"
  • ringo  •  Mars, Pennsylvania  •  1 month 17 days ago
    oic there is no inflation if you dismiss food,fuel,healthcare,insurance,new car, airline travel and clothing costs...and who buys those things anyway?
  • Just  •  Hampton, Virginia  •  1 month 17 days ago
    Changing from CPI to PCE will drop index by 0.5 - 1.0 percentage point. Same deal when they change the components in CPI back then. Has the Fed notice the price of milk, bread , egg and gas has gone up over 100% from a few years ago? Lowering interest rate is not going to do the job. Are banks going to make me a loan, or a mortgage if I am unemployed? Why are credit card companies charging us 24% in interest ? Fed aim to pop up wall street so we all think economy is improving. Enriching bankerss and wall streeters. Inflating every commodities will only hurt the little people. I think Ben is going to resign his job next time. Too political to him.
  • Anonymous  •  1 month 17 days ago
    It's all a sham and a complete lie. These folks have failed time and time again. Fool me once, shame on me...Fool me again and again and again...Shame on me.
  • A Yahoo! User  •  Newark, New Jersey  •  1 month 17 days ago
    You elected they a-holes or are you the a-oles.. Vote these bunch of do nothing ,greedy politicians out in November, or SHUT YOUR MOUTH!!
  • Bryan  •  Mililani Town, Hawaii  •  1 month 17 days ago
    Well folks, what is true is that everything I need to buy inorder to survive, like food, gas, insurance, etc. cost a lot more than it did last year. What a lie.
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