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Highlights
Consumer price inflation in July softened overall in July while core inflation held steady. The overall consumer price index in July posted a 0.1 percent increase in July, following a 0.2 percent rise in June, and matching the consensus expectation for a 0.1 percent rise in the overall CPI. Meanwhile, the core CPI inflation rate was unchanged with a 0.2 percent increase in July, following a 0.2 percent rise in June, and equaling expectations.
Year-on-year, the overall CPI was stood at 2.4 percent in July, compared to 2.7 percent in June. The core rate was unchanged in July at up 2.2 percent on a year-on-year basis.
Energy prices actually helped the overall CPI in July. In the non-expenditure category for energy, prices fell 1.0 percent, following a 0.5 percent decline the month before. For July, gasoline prices were down 1.7 percent. Food price inflation moderated to a 0.3 percent rise in July from 0.5 percent in June.
Expenditure categories showing weakness were transportation, down 0.3 percent (inclusive of gasoline); recreation, down 0.1 percent; and "other," flat. Upward price pressure was seen in medical care, up 0.6 percent; apparel, up 0.4 percent after a string of declines; and food & beverages, up 0.3 percent. Housing and also education & communication both were moderate with 0.2 percent gains for the month.
The core rate held steady in July on a rounded basis and even with greater decimal detail. However, the unrounded numbers were on the high side of 0.2 percent for both of the latest months. On an unrounded basis, the core CPI rose 0.23618 in July, following a 0.23244 percent boost in June. The rise was 0.14978 percent in May.
Today's report shows some reversal of energy costs, helping to bring overall inflation down. The core rate is moderate but may still be above the Fed's preferences. Year-on-year, the core is at 2.2 percent and the unrounded core numbers show the marginal annualized pace even higher than year-on-year. Still, bonds and equities should like the numbers. The dollar may dip on the belief that U.S. interest rates will be coming down. But today's core still fits the Fed's "definition" that any improvement in inflation is not yet convincing.
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