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Highlights
Producer prices jumped overall in April due to a spike in energy components while the core PPI held steady. The overall PPI surged 0.7 percent in April, following a 1.0 percent jump in March. April's increase matched the consensus expectation for a 0.7 percent rise in the overall producer price index. The core rate was flat in April, also following no change in March. The markets had forecast the core rate to rise 0.2 percent.
The year-on-year rate for the overall PPI rose to up 3.2 percent in April from up 3.1 percent in March. The year-on-year core rate was unchanged at 1.6 percent.
For the overall PPI, strength was in energy. By special groupings, energy increased a monthly 3.4 percent in April, following a 3.6 percent boost in March. April's rise was led by gasoline, up 8.2 percent; residential gas, up 0.5 percent; and home heating oil, up 4.8 percent. Consumer food prices moderated to a 0.4 percent increase, following a 1.4 percent advance in March.
Keeping the core rate steady was a dip in consumer goods excluding foods and energy, which slipped 0.1 while capital equipment edged up 0.1 percent. Passenger car prices fell 1.0 percent and light motor trucks declined 0.5 percent.
Overall prices at the crude level of production fell 1.5 percent, following a 3.2 spike in March. Excluding food and energy, crude prices rose 0.4 percent, following a 7.7 percent surge the month before. Prices at the intermediate level rose 0.9 percent in April, following a 1.0 percent boost in March. Excluding food and energy, intermediate prices increased 0.8 percent, following a 0.2 percent gain in March.
Today's report has positive news on the core rate but pass through of energy costs is a remaining concern. The PPI numbers will be positive for bonds (focusing on core) and would definitely be a positive for equities except for a weak retail sales report showing flat ex-autos sales in April.
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