Uh oh! While the year-over-year inflation rate as measured by the PCE deflator was essentially unchanged in February (it rose slightly, from 2.43% in January to 2.45%), the annualized month-over-month inflation rate, at 4.1%, is still running well above the Fed’s 2% target. Our measure of trend inflation rose half a point, from 2.6% to 3.1%. It bears repeating that our measure of trend inflation is designed to filter out much of the high frequency movements in the month-over-month inflation rate while responding in a timely fashion to changes in the trend.
The outlook is not much better when the “volatile” food and energy components of the PCE deflator are removed: The month-over-month inflation rate dropped from 5.6% to 3.2% (good), but is still well above the Fed’s 2% target (bad). The year-over-year inflation rate fell slightly, from 2.9% to 2.8%. And our measure of trend inflation was essentially unchanged, coming in at 3.16%.
The Policy Outlook
In a sense, the latest core PCE inflation numbers are not a surprise: they were foreshadowed by core CPI inflation which came out a couple of weeks ago. For the first two months of 2024, trend core inflation is up and is considerably higher than the Fed’s 2% target. If the monthly inflation rate continues to come in on the high side, expect to see the year-over-year inflation rate start to rise — just as it did in 2020-21. Along side the solid GDP growth and labor market, recent inflation makes it easier for those building a case for raising (or not lowering) interest rates.