Skip to content
Trending
July 18, 2025Netflix posts earnings beat as revenue grows 16% in second quarter July 15, 2025Powell asks inspector general to review $2.5 billion renovation after Trump blasts Fed project July 18, 2025Crypto theft is booming as criminals increasingly turn to physical attacks July 15, 2025Inflation report Tuesday should provide clues on the impact tariffs are having on prices July 16, 2025‘Lost their identity’: Why Target is struggling to win over shoppers and investors July 18, 2025Abbott stock fell victim to an old earnings season truth: It’s all about the guidance July 16, 2025Jamie Dimon says JPMorgan Chase will get involved in stablecoins as fintech threat looms July 15, 2025We’re raising our CrowdStrike price target after shortsighted post-earnings selling July 14, 2025CrowdStrike drops about 6% on lackluster guidance, ongoing impact from July IT outage July 15, 2025Starbucks employees to return to the office four days a week โ€” or take a payout
EverydayRead
  • HOME
  • Business
  • Earnings
  • Economy
  • Finance
  • Lifestyle
EverydayRead
EverydayRead
  • HOME
  • Business
  • Earnings
  • Economy
  • Finance
  • Lifestyle
EverydayRead
  Economy  Two key inflation reports this week will help decide the size of the Fed’s interest rate cut
Economy

Two key inflation reports this week will help decide the size of the Fed’s interest rate cut

AdminAdmin—September 11, 20240

People shop at a store in Brooklyn on August 14, 2024 in New York City. 

Spencer Platt | Getty Images

The Federal Reserve gets its last look this week at inflation readings before it will determine the size of a widely expected interest rate cut soon.

On Wednesday, the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics will release its consumer price index report for August. A day later, the BLS issues its producer price index report, also for August, a measure used as a proxy for costs at the wholesale level.

With the issue virtually settled over whether the Fed is going to cut rates when it wraps up the next policy meeting Sept. 18, the only question is by how much. Friday’s jobs report provided little clarity on the issue, so it will be left to the CPI and PPI readings hopefully to clear things up.

“Inflation data has taken a backseat to labor market data in terms of influence on Fed policy,” Citigroup economist Veronica Clark said in a note. “But with markets โ€” and likely Fed officials themselves โ€“ split on the appropriate size of the first rate cut on September 18, August CPI data could remain an important factor in the upcoming decision.”

The Dow Jones consensus forecast is for a 0.2% increase in the CPI, both for the all-items measure and the core that excludes volatile food and energy items. On an annual basis, that is expected to translate into respective inflation rates of 2.6% and 3.2%. PPI also is projected to increase 0.2% on both headline and core. Fed officials generally put more emphasis on core as a better indicator of longer-run trends.

More stories

Germanyโ€™s new economy boss has a plan โ€” and it starts with risk, speed and big bets

May 10, 2025

Charting the Biden economy: Despite all the growth and jobs, a deeply unpopular president

January 21, 2025

If Trump wants to kill inflation, the first thing he needs to do is get more homes built

December 12, 2024

Why this week’s positive inflation reports won’t look as good to the Fed

March 14, 2025

At least for CPI, the readings are not particularly close to the Fed 2% long-run target. But there are a few important caveats to remember.

First, while the Fed pays attention to the CPI, it is not its principal yardstick for inflation. That would be the Commerce Department’s personal consumption expenditures price index, which most recently pegged headline inflation at 2.5% in July.

Second, policymakers are as concerned about the direction of movement almost as much as the absolute value, and the trend for the past several months has been a decided moderation in inflation. On headline prices in particular, the August 12-month CPI forecast would represent a 0.3 percentage point decline from July.

Finally, the focus for Fed officials has shifted, from a laser view on taming inflation to mushrooming fears over the state of the labor market. Hiring has slowed considerably since April, with the average monthly gain in nonfarm payrolls down to 135,000 from 255,000 in the prior five months, and job openings have declined.

A baby step to start

As the focus on labor has intensified, so has the expectation for the Fed to start rolling back rates. The benchmark fed funds rate currently stands at 5.25% to 5.50%.

“The August CPI report should show more progress in getting the inflation rate back down to the Fed’s 2.0 percent target,” wrote Dean Baker, co-founder of the Center for Economic and Policy Research. “Barring some extraordinary surprises, there should be nothing in this report that would deter the Fed from making a rate cut and quite possibly a large one.”

Markets, however, seem to have made their peace with the Fed starting out slowly.

Futures market pricing on Tuesday indicated 71% odds that the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee will kick off the easing campaign with a quarter percentage point reduction, and just a 29% chance of a more aggressive half-point cut, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch.

Some economists, though, think that could be a mistake.

Citing the general pullback in hiring coupled with substantial downward revisions of previous months’ jobs counts, Samuel Tombs, Pantheon Macroeconomics’ chief U.S. economist, thinks the “summer slowdown probably will look even sharper in a few months’ time,” and the downtrend in hiring “has much further to run.”

“We’re therefore disappointed โ€” but not surprised โ€” that FOMC members who spoke after the jobs report, but before the pre-meeting blackout, are still leaning towards a 25 [basis point] easing this month,” Tombs said in a note Monday. “But by the meeting in November, with two more employment reports in hand, the case for rapid rate cuts will be overwhelming.”

Indeed, market pricing, while indicating a tepid start to cuts in September, projects a half-point reduction in November and possibly another in December.

Donโ€™t miss these insights from CNBC PRO

Oracle shares jump 13% on earnings and revenue beat
Restaurant chain BurgerFi files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection
Related posts
  • Related posts
  • More from author
Economy

Kevin Warsh touts ‘regime change’ at Fed and calls for partnership with Treasury

July 18, 20250
Economy

Inflation picks up again in June, rising at 2.7% annual rate

July 16, 20250
Economy

Inflation report Tuesday should provide clues on the impact tariffs are having on prices

July 15, 20250
Load more
Read also
Finance

Crypto theft is booming as criminals increasingly turn to physical attacks

July 18, 20250
Economy

Kevin Warsh touts ‘regime change’ at Fed and calls for partnership with Treasury

July 18, 20250
Earnings

Abbott stock fell victim to an old earnings season truth: It’s all about the guidance

July 18, 20250
Business

Netflix posts earnings beat as revenue grows 16% in second quarter

July 18, 20250
Finance

Jamie Dimon says JPMorgan Chase will get involved in stablecoins as fintech threat looms

July 16, 20250
Economy

Inflation picks up again in June, rising at 2.7% annual rate

July 16, 20250
Load more
ยฉ 2023, All Rights Reserved.
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Cookie Law
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions