US producer prices rise due to increased costs of strong services; inflation expectations decline

US producer prices rise due to increased costs of strong services; inflation expectations decline

Summary
Producer prices increase 0.3% in July
PPI rises 0.8%⁣ year-on-year ​on base effects
Excluding food, energy and trade, PPI gains 0.2%
Consumer ⁢sentiment little changed in ‌August

WASHINGTON, Aug 11⁤ (Reuters) – U.S. producer prices increased slightly more than expected in July​ as the cost⁤ of services rebounded at the fastest pace ⁢in ‌nearly a year, but ⁣the trend remained consistent with a moderation in ‍inflationary pressures.

The report from the Labor Department on Friday‍ also​ showed goods prices ‌outside food and energy were ⁣unchanged last month, indicating‍ that the recent goods disinflation was ⁢becoming entrenched.⁤ Underlying producer prices also rose moderately.

The data ⁤followed on ​the heels of news on Thursday that ​consumer prices‍ rose moderately in July. Most economists expect the Federal Reserve to leave interest rates unchanged at its policy‌ meeting next month.

“The​ economy still faces some inflationary pressure from rapidly rising wages, but the cooldown of business input costs ⁣should help keep consumer prices on a downward trajectory ⁣in the fall,” said Bill ⁣Adams, ⁤chief economist at‍ Comerica Bank in Dallas.

The producer price index for final demand increased 0.3% last month. Data for June ​was revised ‍lower to show ​the PPI ⁤was unchanged instead of nudging up by⁣ the previously reported‌ 0.1%.

Economists polled ‍by Reuters had ‌expected the PPI to gain 0.2%. Some said the downgrade to June’s data meant the rise‍ in‌ the PPI last month was in⁤ line with expectations. In the‌ 12 months through July, the PPI increased ‌0.8% after ⁤gaining 0.2% in June, boosted by ‍a lower base of ​comparison last year.

The ‍cost of wholesale services jumped 0.5% ⁤last month, the ‍largest increase since last August, after dipping 0.1% in ‌June.

A 7.6% surge‍ in portfolio management fees accounted for 40%‌ of the rise in services. Portfolio management fees had‍ dropped ⁢0.4% in June. Last month’s surge was likely due to the strong ‍performance of financial ‌markets​ as investors bet the Fed was probably done hiking rates.​ Since ⁤March 2022, the U.S. central bank has raised its benchmark overnight interest rate ⁢by 525 basis points ⁤to the​ current 5.25%-5.50% range.

There ⁢were ​also increases in the⁤ costs of machinery and vehicle, ⁢chemicals and ‍allied products wholesaling as well as securities brokerage, dealing, investment advice and ⁢related services. Hospital outpatient care rebounded 0.7%, but the ​cost​ of inpatient care declined while physician care​ was‌ unchanged.

Airline fares ‌increased 1.7%,​ but margins for food ‌and alcohol retailing fell 2.5%. The cost of‍ freight and cargo transportation also declined, but transportation and ⁢warehousing increased 0.5%, the first gain in more than a year.

Reuters⁣ Graphics

GOODS DISINFLATION
Goods prices ticked up 0.1% last month after being unchanged in June.‌ A 0.5% rebound in the cost of food​ was largely offset by energy prices, which were unchanged. Excluding the volatile food and energy components, the so-called core goods prices were ⁤unchanged last month…

Article from ⁤ www.reuters.com

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