U.S. Inflation Falls to Lowest Level in Three Years

Executive summary:

  • U.S. consumer-price gains eased to 2.9% in July—the lowest increase since 2021
  • We believe markets may be too aggressive in their projections for Fed rate cuts this year
  • UK unemployment fell unexpectedly in June

On the newest episode of Market Week in Review, Director of Investment Strategies, Shailesh Kshatriya, and Senior Internal Communications Analyst McKenna Painter discussed the latest batch of U.S. macroeconomic data. They also chatted about the outlook for U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed) rate cuts as well as recent inflation and labor market numbers from the UK.

U.S. markets rebound on encouraging economic data

Painter and Kshatriya began by unpacking the latest economic data from the U.S., which Kshatriya characterized as encouraging, especially in the wake of the global market rout on Aug. 5. He said that recently released data pertaining to inflation, jobs, and retail sales has helped financial markets recover from the early August selloff, which was fueled by a disappointing U.S. employment report and the unwinding of the popular Japanese Yen carry trade. In fact, as of market close on Aug. 15, the benchmark S&P 500® Index was back to the level it stood at when the month began, Kshatriya pointed out.

The key report released the week of Aug. 12 was July’s U.S. consumer price index (CPI), he said, noting that headline inflation tracked largely in line with consensus expectations, rising at a 2.9% annual rate. “This was the first time since March 2021 that the headline CPI came in below 3%,” Kshatriya remarked, adding that core inflation eased to 3.2% on a year-over-year basis as well.

Moreover, the U.S. producer price index (PPI) also moderated during July, Kshatriya said, rising by only 2.2% on an annual basis—compared to June’s 2.7% increase. This is important, he explained, because producer prices ultimately feed into consumer prices and also inform the U.S. Federal Reserve’s (Fed) preferred inflation gauge, the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index.

Kshatriya noted that the good news wasn’t just limited to U.S. inflation, with positive trends also observed in consumer spending and the labor market. He explained that U.S. retail sales during July were stronger than expected, while weekly initial jobless claims moderated from the previous week, coming in below consensus forecasts. “The decline in U.S. unemployment claims indicates that the labor market is slowing, but in a measured way,” he remarked, stressing that overall, the latest economic data has generally been pretty supportive ever since the early August selloff.