Used cars, housing, and clothing costs jump as inflation hits 40-year high of 7% ~ and what economists are saying about it

Fortune and Yahoo Finance

The latest consumer price index (CPI) rose 7% over the past year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), which publishes the report. That continues to be the fastest annual increase in the inflation rate in 40 years. The measure of so-called core inflation, which excludes food and energy costs that can be more volatile, rose by 5.5% over the past year, the fastest rate since 1991.

Breaking down the overall price increases by month, consumer prices rose 0.5% from November to December. That’s slightly faster than experts’ expectation for a 0.4% increase last month, but still at a slower monthly pace than the previous two months. 

INFLATION TRACKER

YEAR-OVER-YEAR CHANGE IN THE CONSUMER PRICE INDEX, NOT SEASONALLY ADJUSTED

CLICK HERE TO SEE INFLATION TRACKER CHART

While inflation remained elevated at the end of last year, experts believe it’s set to slow in 2022. “Some of the increase in inflation, particularly on a year-over-year basis, is due to comparisons with 2020, when prices were weak coming out of the pandemic,” says PNC chief economist Gus Faucher. Additionally, rising prices in several categories of goods and services, including autos, airfares, and energy, stem from the fact that supply has not caught up with demand as the U.S. reopened, Faucher says. He predicts inflation is likely to peak on a year-ago basis early this year.

Increases in vehicle costs, as well as shelter—which includes rent and homeowners’ equivalent rent—contributed heavily toward the latest CPI spikes. Apparel prices were also on the rise in December, as were food costs, but less so than in recent months. Previously energy prices had been skyrocketing, but the monthly increases declined in December, thanks to falling oil prices

The cost of used cars and trucks surged 3.5% month over month, with annual increases topping ​​an incredible 37.3%. Inflation on new cars was slightly less, with prices rising 1% from November to December and 11.8% over the previous year. 

Although that’s down from the highs seen over the summer, the U.S. likely hasn’t experienced enough of a recovery in supply to push prices down significantly, writes Dean Baker, senior economist with the Center for Economic and Policy Research. “That probably will take another couple of months,” he says. 

INFLATION TRACKER

ANNUAL PRICE CHANGES, AS OF DECEMBER 2021, SEASONALLY ADJUSTED

CLICK HERE TO SEE CHART

Housing costs also saw another steady 0.4% month-over-month increase in December, jumping 4.1% over the past year. That’s in line with increases previously seen in November and October. Faucher predicts that the index for shelter will remain high and likely serve as a big contributor to inflation in this year.

In fact, housing is now contributing more to monthly core CPI inflation than it typically was in 2019, reflecting challenges in the housing market, according to the Council of Economic Advisers. 

The price of many household items, including apparel and furniture, saw jumps in December. Apparel rose 1.7% from November to December, its largest increase since January 2021. However, Baker points out that prices are now up 0.6% from pre-pandemic levels. “These are mostly imports, so [the] higher dollar should be putting downward pressure on prices,” he writes. 

The index for household furnishings and operations rose 1.1% in December as well, with prices for furniture, bedding, and housekeeping supplies contributing to the surge. 

“Inflation is still almost entirely driven by durable goods, not services,” writes Jason Furman, an economist and professor at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government. This should come down as supply chains “unsnarl,” he says, but prices in the services sectors (which includes housing) are the big question.

While food prices rose 0.5% in December and 6.3% over the past 12 months, it was a slower pace than in previous months. Prices for groceries, for instance, increased just 0.4% in December after rising 0.8% in November. Meat prices, in particular, fell 0.9%, still up 14.8% year over year. 

While experts predict inflation will slow in 2022 as supply catches up to demand, prices for many other goods and services will be higher in 2022 than before the pandemic, due to higher labor costs and input prices, Faucher says.

The current inflation stems primarily from COVID-related disruptions in the global supply chain and unique characteristics of the pandemic economy, not from a generally overstimulated economy, writes Chad Stone, chief economist for the progressive think tank Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. “Keeping the economic expansion going and lowering inflation require controlling the virus,” he adds.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

What economists are saying about the highest inflation in nearly 40 years

U.S. consumer prices rose at their fastest rate in nearly four decades in December, with inflationary pressures rippling through the economy as supply chain bottlenecks persisted alongside elevated demand. 

The Bureau of Labor Statistics’ December Consumer Price Index (CPI) posted a 7.0% year-over-year increase at the end of 2021 in the fastest increase since 1982. This matched consensus estimates, based on Bloomberg data, but accelerated from November’s 6.8% increase. On a month-over-month basis, consumer prices rose 0.5% in December, or slightly more than the 0.4% rise expected, to mark an 18th consecutive month of price increases.

In response to this report, many economists acknowledged the decades-high surge in prices, but looked ahead to a moderation in the pace of price increases this year. Others suggested the latest report would further prompt the Federal Reserve to move more quickly and aggressively than previously anticipated to rein in rising prices. 

Here were some of the main takeaways from economists’ commentary about the latest inflation data. 

‘Demand is showing very little let-up’

According to Rick Rieder, BlackRock’s chief investment officer of global fixed income, the CPI report shows an unusual willingness by consumers to continue paying for increasingly pricey goods and services. 

“It is a very rare time in history, in fact, most people operating in markets haven’t seen this sort of demand outstripping supply in the real economy in their careers, with some areas seemingly depicting a dynamic suggesting that ‘price is no object,'” Rieder said in an email. 

“Clearly, inflation has been escalating for a number of months due to shortages of supply in areas such as housing, commodities, semiconductors, new and used cars, etc., and those supply shortages are mostly still in place today,” he said. “Remarkably, though, demand is showing very little let-up despite these prices staying sticky high, with the rapid transmission of the Omicron variant of the virus making a return to normalcy a more extended process.”

He added that he doesn’t expect to see “any let-up for a few months” in rising prices, while adding these trends may begin to ease into spring and summer this year. 

‘Pressure on the Fed’ 

With headline CPI inflation still climbing on an annual basis, the latest report will vindicate Federal Reserve officials’ recent messaging and allow them to move more quickly to raise rates, end their asset purchase tapering program and, eventually, start drawing down the central bank’s nearly $9 trillion balance sheet, according to a number of economists. Just earlier this week, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said during a hearing before the Senate Banking Committee that, “If we see inflation persisting at high levels, longer than expected, if we have to raise interest rates more over time, then we will.” 

“Today’s number will increase pressure on the Fed to get monetary policy tightening off the starting block,” Seema Shah, chief strategist at Principal Global Investors, wrote in an email. 

And indeed, for many economists, the latest inflation data reinforce that the Fed will need to raise rates four times this year, compared to the three rate hikes previously telegraphed in the central bank’s last Summary of Economic Projections from December.

“Overall, the breadth of the inflation supports our call for four Fed hikes this year, along with the start of quantitative tightening,” Bank of America economists led by Aditya Bhave wrote in a note. “Core inflation is likely to peak in March 2022, after which the [year-over-year] comparisons will turn highly unfavorable. But the key question is where core inflation lands in the medium term. And increasingly the risks are that it will land closer to 3% than the Fed’s 2% target.”

Others offered a similar view. 

“Persistent high inflation rates together with the recent strong labor market data reinforce the hawkish narrative provided by the Fed,” Christian Scherrmann, DWS Group U.S. economist, said in an email. “Looking ahead, Omicron looks set to dictate the fate of the economy in January and maybe in February. But current indications on how the new variant plays out suggest that the Fed will remain on track to reduce its accommodative monetary policy, most likely as early as in March this year, by hiking rates for the first time since December 2018.”

‘The run of big increases is over’ 

Despite the surge in inflation in December, many economists are looking for the rate of price increases to ease beginning mid-this year. 

December’s increase to 7.0% … likely is not quite the peak which we think will be about 7.2% in January and February, but the run of big increases is over, and it will start to fall in March,” Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, wrote in a note. “By September, we look for 4[.5]%.”

Tendayi Kapfidze, U.S. Bank chief economist, told Yahoo Finance Live on Wednesday he expected “we might have one or two more months of really high prints before we start on the downtrend.” 

“Our expectation is that by the end of the year, we should be somewhere around the 3% level,” he added. “So we should get a deceleration in inflation maybe starting in the second quarter and certainly in the second half of the year.”

And while the headline CPI has yet to peak, others pointed out that some of the key components of CPI started to come down in December compared to prior months in the first hints at a broader moderation. This was particularly visible in the energy index, where prices fell 0.4% in December, compared to November. Fuel oil and gasoline prices each declined during the month, though they were still higher by upwards of 40%, compared to the same month in 2020. Food prices rose 0.5% in December, though this slowed compared to faster increases in each of the three months prior. 

“Although today’s inflation number was pretty much in line with our and most analysts’ expectations, the data should have been better given the significant decline in energy prices, particularly gasoline,” said Matthew Sherwood, global economist at Economist Intelligence Unit. Core inflation is now rising faster than headline month on month. Inflationary pressures are now pretty well endemic across the entire U.S. economy.”