Price cuts, weaker spending could bolster Fed's faith in inflation
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[June 01, 2024] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Price cuts by major U.S. retailers and new data
showing a slowdown in consumer spending may boost the Federal Reserve's
confidence in falling inflation and take the edge off of corporate
profits that have grabbed a larger share of national income since the
start of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Adjusted for inflation both overall consumption and disposable income
dropped slightly in April. The Commerce Department had reported on
Thursday that the U.S. economy grew more slowly than initially thought
over the first three months of the year largely because of a lowered
pace of consumption, a core prop of the economy that Fed officials feel
needs to cool for inflation to return to the central bank's 2% target.
Inflation data released on Friday showed the personal consumption
expenditures price index rose at a 2.7% annual rate in April, matching
the gain in March. The Fed uses PCE inflation to set its 2% inflation
target, while the "core" index stripped of volatile food and energy
prices rose 2.8%, also the same as the month before.
Policymakers have been worried that progress back towards the central
bank's inflation target may have stalled after a steady decline from the
peak above 7% in June 2022.
But while the headline numbers pointed to another lost month, there were
signs of change. Core prices rose less than expected on a month-to-month
basis, and the twin declines in "real" consumption and income confirmed
the sense of an economy easing gradually back from a period of fast
growth and price increases.
"While American household balance sheets remain solid in our opinion,
the margin for discretionary spending has been much thinner," said Tuan
Nguyen, an economist at RSM US, an observation that matched new data
showing spending had slowed for things like recreational goods as
consumers spent more for housing and utilities.
"More likely than not, the economy is cooling down to a soft landing,
which gives the Fed a reason to rethink its hawkish stance on keeping
interest rates at a multi-decade high level ... If we get more data like
this in the coming months ... we think the Fed should act sooner rather
than later," he wrote in an analysis of the new inflation and
consumption report.
The U.S. central bank is expected at its June 11-12 policy meeting to
keep its benchmark interest rate steady in the 5.25%-5.50% range, where
it has been since last July. Fed officials say the next move on rates
will likely be to lower them, but not until they feel assured inflation
will resume its decline to 2%.
Investors expect an initial rate cut at the Fed's September meeting,
though by a slim margin.
Policymakers themselves have been reluctant to commit, typically noting
that as long as the job market and the economy overall remain healthy
there's no rush to lower interest rates, particular with aspects of
inflation still troubling them.
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A person shops for vegetables at a supermarket in Manhattan, New
York City, U.S., March 28, 2022. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
Some policymakers, for example, have looked beyond the headline
inflation number to the share of goods and services where price
increases still exceed 3% annually. In April, that remained around
55%, roughly double what it was before the COVID-19 pandemic.
LANDSCAPE SHIFT
Change may be coming.
High-profile retailers like Target and Walmart have been cutting
prices for food and other staples, with Walgreens this week saying
in a price-cut announcement that the company "understands our
customers are under financial strain."
Fed officials have said they feel consumers are in broadly good
shape, with unemployment low and wages rising. But they've also
noted signs of stress among lower-income households, including
rising loan default rates and credit card borrowing.
The price cuts announced this month may show that same sense
developing in corporate executive suites and touching off the sort
of dynamic Fed policymakers have anticipated: A fight for market
share as pandemic-era pricing power wanes, along with the elevated
profits that followed it.
The data released by the Commerce Department on Thursday showed that
even though earnings fell slightly, corporate profits continued to
take an elevated share of the income earned by all workers and
businesses combined.
Corporations' share of income climbed during the pandemic as snarled
supply chains and pandemic-era transfer payments to individuals left
home-bound consumers with money to spend on goods that had become
scarce - a recipe for price hikes and higher margins. When pandemic
restrictions were lifted and in-person events resumed, that surplus
purchasing power shifted to travel, restaurants and other services -
and inflation spiked there as well.
Fed officials in recent weeks have said they think the landscape has
shifted, with businesses generally saying their capacity to raise
prices is diminished compared to the last two years. In the Fed's
most recent "Beige Book" collection of anecdotes about the economy,
there was a widespread sense of consumers becoming more selective
and putting pressure on firms.
"Consumers are becoming more price-conscious, likely putting
pressure on profit margins. We should expect more discounts and
incentives as some consumers struggle with persistently high
prices," Jeffrey Roach, the chief economist at LPL Financial, said
after the release of the Fed report.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider;Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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