As oil prices remain as they are in relation to where they were one year ago, measured inflation rates have come back up, some faster than others. This does mimic the real world situation where consumers are paying more now for gasoline than they did last year.
They are paying less than three years ago for the same product, but annual statistics are focused solely on the annual time frame even as more forthright economic analysis recognizes both comparisons.
The personal consumption expenditures deflator, which is said to be the Federal Reserve’s favored measure of inflation, for January 2017 rose just 1.89 percent year over year. It was the 57th consecutive month less than the 2 percent mandate (given by the Fed itself when in early 2012 it made the 2 percent target for this metric its official definition of price stability).
Though there is a chance that the streak will end with the update for February, it should not go unnoticed how weak that number is given that oil prices in January were up an average of 65 percent over January 2016.
If the Fed doesn’t seem like it is at all concerned about inflation, that is because its policymakers know there isn’t any inflation beyond these base commodity effects. If oil doesn’t rise by a lot very soon, the rise of the PCE deflator, as well as that for the consumer price index, above 2 percent will be a short one.
The lack of uninterrupted acceleration in the PCE deflator is indicative of the same in the real economy. As has been the case for months now, the increase in the measured rate of inflation is almost in total a subtraction for real variables like spending and income.
Nominally, both income and spending remain largely unchanged, a result that is unsurprising given the comparison of prices to three years ago as opposed to only one year ago.
Real disposable income per capita rose just 1.32 percent in January, the lowest gain since the start of 2014 (when tax changes in 2012 created the monstrous base effects shown in the chart above). That is about the same rate as August 2010, as well as August 2012, both periods of considerable economic strain and uncertainty. The difference then as opposed to now is nominal income growth that since the end of 2014 (coincidentally the time of the “best jobs market in decades” as well as the first approach and then completion of “full employment”) has been more subdued than has become usual for this lost decade.
Pray for Cheap Oil
Without nominal growth in income there is no meaningful rise in nominal spending estimates, suggesting that these price changes leave consumers to cut back in discretionary spending as to the proportion of non-discretionary items like gasoline that take up that much more of an unchanging budget (either work or fixed income).
It echoes in official statistics what we find in more detailed hard analysis. I recently wrote about Target’s quarterly earnings update:
This works as a proxy for not just Target’s sales and store data, as the rebound in oil and thus gasoline in tandem with the per-transaction estimates would propose the same price sensitivity and budget constraints (again, absent wage and earnings growth). If you spend more on the same amount of gasoline, it makes shopping elsewhere that much more vulnerable…
In other words, there is some detailed evidence here that consumers are fleeing “brick and mortar” retail because of price sensitivity related to depressed macro factors like wages.
They go to Amazon rather than Target in store even though they in all likelihood would prefer to shop in the real world, and all because they are forced to on limited discretionary budgets that are more and more limited.
From this view, contrary to established policy, we had better hope that oil prices don’t rise and thus measured inflation decelerates all over again.
The PCE spending estimates were drastically less than expected because of just this real vs. nominal imbalance. With the publication of the data series, the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow estimate for Q1 2017 was reduced from 2.5 percent all the way to 1.8 percent – which does include still, for some reason, all the latest Q1 residual seasonality.
In other words, all of this is consistent with an economy that remains stuck as it has been for years.
The ebbs and flows are all minor in nature, and in many ways just a negative feedback loop repeating over and over on different time scales. This fourth “reflation” hope is based, as all of them, as if it might turn out any different than those prior. Instead, in the parlance of orthodox central banking, there are many serious “headwinds” still indicated one month already into 2017.
Jeff Snider is head of global investment research for Alhambra Investment Partners, a registered investment advisory based in Palmetto Bay, Florida.Click HERE to read more of his commentary.
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