Two recent inflation reports indicated that overall pricing pressures have retreated from peaks in 2022. But both also signaled that inflation remains above the Fed's target of 2.0%. According to the latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) report, the overall inflation rate in January of 3.2% was higher than the prior month's 3.1%. That sour news was offset a bit by a drop in the core CPI rate, which excludes food and energy and eased to 3.8% from 3.9%. Two main factors are propping up CPI: Transportation Services (+9.9% YOY) and Shelter (+5.7%). These categories have prices that don't fall sharply. The other inflation report was the Producer Price Index (PPI), which measures pricing trends farther up the supply chain, at the manufacturing level. Here, we also saw a modest pick-up. The core final demand PPI rate for February was 1.6%, up 60 basis points month-over-month after having fallen from 4.4% a year ago. We have noted for months that making progress on inflation will be hard -- and nothing was overly alarming about either of the reports. Energy prices remain relatively subdued and prices at the PPI Intermediate demand level -- farther up the value chain -- continue to decline. We think the June 2022 CPI rate was
VIVK, BHVN, AUID, TBLD, ZWS, AXP, INTZ, JEF, ELV, DHR
EPD, SCHW
HLT, LMT, KMI, EFX, V, UPS, TXN
V
CB