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Wholesale prices fell 0.1% in August amid inflation fears

  • The producer price index, a gauge of prices received at the wholesale level, declined 0.1%, in line with expectations.
  • On a year-over-year basis, the index, which is a gauge of wholesale prices, increased 8.7%, the lowest increase since August 2021.

The prices that producers receive for goods and services declined in August, a mild respite from inflation pressures that are threatening to send the U.S. economy into recession.

The producer price index, a gauge of prices received at the wholesale level, declined 0.1%, according to a Bureau of Labor Statistics report Wednesday. Excluding food, energy and trade services, PPI increased 0.2%.

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Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had been expecting headline PPI to decline 0.1%.

On a year-over-year basis, headline PPI increased 8.7%, a substantial pullback from the 9.8% increase in July and the lowest annual rise since August 2021. Core PPI increased 5.6% from a year ago, matching the lowest rate since June 2021.

As has been the case over the summer, the drop in prices came largely from a decline in energy.

The index for final demand energy slid 6% in August, which saw a 12.7% slide in the gasoline index that was responsible for more than three-quarters of the 1.2% decline in prices for final demand goods. That helped feed through to consumer prices, which fell sharply after briefly surpassing $5 a gallon at the pump earlier in the summer.

Wholesale services prices increased 0.4% for the month, indicating a further transition for a pandemic-era economy where goods inflation soared. Final demand services prices increased 0.4% for the month, with the balance of that coming from a 0.8% increase in trade services.

Those numbers come a day after the BLS reported consumer price index data for August that was higher than expected. The two reports differ in that the PPI shows what producers receive for finished goods, while the CPI reflects what consumers pay in the marketplace.

The PPI can be leading indicator for inflation as wholesale prices feed through the economy. However, it’s importance has been tempered over the years as manufactured goods make up less of a share of total spending.

Following the Tuesday report, stocks tanked and expectations surged for Federal Reserve action at its meeting next week. Stock market futures were positive after the PPI report while Treasury yields were higher as well.

Markets were debating between a half percentage point and three-quarter point interest rate increase. After the release, the market fully priced in a three-quarter point move, and there is now a 1-in-3 chance of a full percentage point hike, according to fed funds futures data tracked by the CME Group.

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Source: Economy - cnbc.com

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