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February 14, 2023 By Peter Boockvar

CPI rundown, and the need to accept a new rate environment

January headline CPI rose .5% m/o/m and .4% core just as expected and follows the revisions done for 2022. The y/o/y gains are 6.4% headline and 5.6% core. We also know that this year the BLS has changed how they calculate CPI and that is using just a one year comparison rather than two. Why they are changing the rules of the game, I’m not sure but PCE will not be altered in its calculation.

Energy prices rebounded by 2% m/o/m and are up 8.7% y/o/y. Food prices continue to be robust, rising by .5% m/o/m and 10.1% y/o/y. I want to highlight here that Fed Governor Waller made a point last week that he’s focused on headline inflation and not core.

Core services inflation rose .5% m/o/m and 7.2% y/o/y as rents, in a much delayed fashion, continues to accelerate higher (though that should slow notably in the coming quarters as we know). OER was up .7% m/o/m and 7.8% y/o/y. Rent of Primary Residence was also up by .7% and by 8.6% y/o/y. Medical care was a drag on the figure as prices fell .4% m/o/m, though up 3.1% y/o/y. Lower health insurance prices, for the quirk calculation stated here months before, was the main drag, falling 3.6% m/o/m. Prices for car insurance jumped by 1.4% m/o/m and almost 15% y/o/y. Fixing one’s car saw a price gain of 1.3% m/o/m and 14.2% y/o/y. Airfares cooled again by 2.1% m/o/m but are still up 25.6% y/o/y. Hotel prices jumped 1.5% m/o/m and by 8.5% y/o/y. Tuition prices rose .3% m/o/m and 3.4% y/o/y.

After a steady string of disinflation, core goods prices rose .1% m/o/m but the y/o/y pace slowed to just 1.4%. Used car prices again saw price declines of 1.9% m/o/m and by 11.6% y/o/y. New car prices though rose again by .2% m/o/m and 5.8% y/o/y. When all is said and done with auto prices, new car prices will remain elevated because the OEM’s are intent on not flooding dealers with inventory anymore. And, three years of limited new car sales means there will be a lot less used car inventory in the few years to come. Apparel prices rose .8% m/o/m and 3.1% y/o/y. While the housing market has obviously slowed with the pace of transactions, the prices of ‘household furnishings and supplies’ continue higher and in January rose .5% m/o/m and 6.4% y/o/y.

Bottom line, further acceleration in core services prices offset the continued drop in core goods prices. For the latter, the 1.4% y/o/y gain is the slowest since February 2021. And for perspective, in the 20 years leading into covid this figure averaged ZERO. I’ll argue that when the inflation dust settles, we are NOT going back to zero and something around 1-3% will be the norm. Yes, technology here is a deflationary force but it has been since the beginning of time. Higher labor costs globally and just in case inventory are the main reasons for my prediction in addition to what I said on vehicles.

As for services, rents in real life are slowing down to a pace of 3-4% so the BLS continues to play catch up to what has already happened. But after this deceleration runs its course, the high cost of buying a home will keep rent demand pretty healthy, partly offset by rising supply. In the 20 years leading into covid, core services prices grew by 2.8% per annum and I believe a higher pace in wage growth than pre Covid will likely raise this sticky rate to 4-5% I believe. The net result combining services and goods inflation will result in 3-4% inflation rather than 1-2%.

The 2 yr yield just before the print was 4.5% vs 4.53% as of this writing. The 10 yr yield is at 3.69% vs 3.68% just before. The dollar is weaker but little changed since the number release.

As for the Fed, they will do as they’ve said over the past few weeks, hike two more times and then keep the fed funds rate above 5% all year. The terminal rate ticked up 3 bps in response to the data to 5.22%. We are in a higher rate environment for longer and I don’t think many have accepted this new reality and the economic and market implications. Big picture, this is a good thing vs the monetary fantasyland we lived for many years but there is always a withdrawal period that will take time to get through.

Services ex Energy y/o/y

Core Goods Prices y/o/y

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Peter is the Chief Investment Officer at Bleakley Advisory Group and is a CNBC contributor. Each day The Boock Report provides summaries and commentary on the macro data and news that matter, with analysis of what it all means and how it fits together.

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Disclaimer - Peter Boockvar is an independent economist and market strategist. The Boock Report is independently produced by Peter Boockvar. Peter Boockvar is also the Chief Investment Officer of Bleakley Financial Group, LLC a Registered Investment Adviser. The Boock Report and Bleakley Financial Group, LLC are separate entities. Content contained in The Boock Report newsletters should not be construed as investment advice offered by Bleakley Financial Group, LLC or Peter Boockvar. This market commentary is for informational purposes only and is not meant to constitute a recommendation of any particular investment, security, portfolio of securities, transaction or investment strategy. The views expressed in this commentary should not be taken as advice to buy, sell or hold any security. To the extent any of the content published as part of this commentary may be deemed to be investment advice, such information is impersonal and not tailored to the investment needs of any specific person. No chart, graph, or other figure provided should be used to determine which securities to buy or sell. Consult your advisor about what is best for you.

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