Lucia Mutikani at Reuters writes:
U.S. retail sales barely rose in September and producer prices recorded their biggest decline in eight months, raising further doubts about whether the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates this year. The weak reports on Wednesday were the latest suggestion that the economy was losing momentum in the face of slowing global growth, a strong dollar, an inventory correction and lower oil prices that are hampering capital spending in the energy sector. Job growth braked sharply in the past two months.
Readers of the headline Weak U.S. retail sales, inflation data cloud rate hike outlook could be forgiven for believing the US economy is headed for recession. After all, retail sales growth has slowed to a crawl.
And the producer price index is declining.
But if we strip out food and energy prices, PPI remains close to the Fed’s 2% inflation target. And low energy prices will eventually feed through as a stimulus.
Hourly earnings in the manufacturing sector are starting to grow.
“The overall message is that consumer spending has remained extremely strong. If sentiment had indeed shifted, it would be hard to explain why sales of cars, certainly among the more expensive items, jumped in September to their highest level since July 2005,” said Harm Bandholz, chief economist at UniCredit Research in New York.
Light vehicle sales continue their upward trajectory.
And construction spending is decidedly bullish.
Not much here to keep Janet Yellen up at nights. When it comes to rate rises, the sooner we get the economy back on a sound footing the better, I say. Otherwise we encourage further capital misallocation and dependency on Fed stimulus. There are no free lunches from central bankers. Everything comes at a price.
Colin, thr Philli Fed has just reported that price increases are limited to the western US. In the east, even after stripping out food and energy, the CPI is negative. If growth rates can vary regionally, I assume deflationary impacts can also.
don’t see how the lower oil price is helping consumers much as it seems the oil companies are boosting there margins instead of dropping the pump prices to match the oil price fall even with currency taken into account
I think a strong dollar is offsetting the price fall in Australia and NZ.