Mostly good news regarding PCE (Personal Consumption Expenditure) inflation. While the annualized monthly core PCE inflation rate rose from 1.3% (March) to 1.4% (April), this rate is nonetheless below the Fed’s 2% target. Further, the annual core PCE inflation rate slipped from 2.67% to 2.52%. And our measure of trend core PCE inflation dropped from 2.94% to 2.43%.

The picture is much the same for overall PCE inflation: The annualized monthly rate rose from 0.14% to 1.21% (again, below the Fed’s 2% target); the annual rate fell from 2.31% to 2.15%; and our measure of trend dropped from 2.59% to 2.13%.

The report indicated that real disposable personal income ticked up to its highest level since January, 2024.

We won’t prognosticate on the likely course of monetary policy since Fed Chairman Powell has already said that the FOMC will wait until the data indicates that the committee should change its policy rate. Chairman Powell also foresees stagflation for the US: a combination of higher inflation and a deteriorating real side of the economy.