October PCE inflation and GDP revision

On November 30, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) released PCE (Personal Consumption Expenditure) data for October 2023. The BEA notes a small monthly change in the PCE deflator (0.6% at an annual rate, down from 4.5% in September), and that the 12-month PCE inflation rate came in at 3.0% (down from 3.4% in September). These numbers largely mirror the earlier CPI (Consumer Price Index) release: the annualized monthly change fell from 4.8% to 0.5%; the 12-month rate from 3.7% to 3.2%. We prefer to look at the 3-month annualized inflation rate which also fell, from 3.7% to 3.2%; CPI inflation fell from 4.9% to 4.4%.

The cognoscenti know that the Fed’s preferred inflation measure is so-called core PCE inflation (taking out the food and energy components). By this measure, the monthly inflation rate fell from 3.8% to 2.0%, a larger decline than recorded by core CPI (3.9% to 2.8%). The 12-month inflation rate fell by 0.2 percentage points, to 3.5%; core CPI inflation fell by 0.1 percentage point to 3.0%. While our preferred 3-month annualized inflation rate fell, it was essentially unchanged at 2.4%. In contrast, the 3-month annualized change in core CPI rose in October, from 3.1% to 3.4%

In summary, the PCE inflation numbers for October confirm what was seen in the CPI inflation reported about two weeks earlier: inflation is down. How much depends on which series you focus upon. Keeping in mind that CPI inflation tends to run about 0.5 percentage points higher than PCE inflation, the data for October suggest that the US economy is approaching the Fed’s 2.0% inflation target.

Gross Domestic Product (Second Estimate)

On November 29 the BEA announced that real GDP for Q3 was revised up from 4.9% to 5.2%. While revisions to nonresidential fixed investment and state and local government spending were the leading causes of the increase, consumer spending was revised down.

Policy outlook

Given the continued decline in the inflation numbers and the continued strength in the output numbers, it appears the economy has digested the record increases in the Fed Funds rate without roiling the real side of the economy. There seems little doubt at this point that Fed policy is achieving its inflation reduction goal and may have reached the peak of the Fed Funds rate during this cycle. That is, nothing in the data points to the need for further increases in the rate and the market is suggesting some rate declines in 2024.

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