The Federal Reserve’s preferred measure of inflation continued to ease in May as the personal consumption expenditures Index remained unchanged on the month and rose by 2.6% from a year ago. The core PCE index, which excludes the more volatile food and energy components, advanced by 0.1% and increased ... READ MORE >
Federal Reserve
RSM US Manufacturing Outlook Index: Malaise continues in June
The best that can be said about manufacturing activity in five regional Federal Reserve banks is that it has moved more or less sideways over the past three months. This lackluster performance is consistent with the global slowdown in economic activity that is a response to tight monetary policies and ... READ MORE >
Slower growth raises prospect of a Fed rate cut
Economic growth appeared much softer in the first five months of the year following the release of key economic data on Thursday. Slower-than-anticipated growth should push the Federal Reserve closer to cutting interest rates. Read more of RSM's insights on the economy, manufacturing and the middle ... READ MORE >
U.S. harmonized index of consumer prices: A more accurate metric of disinflation?
Part of a central bank’s challenge in setting its policy rate lies in knowing which measure of inflation to follow. From the consumer price index to the personal consumption expenditures index, different measures of inflation can tell a different story. On Friday, investors and policymakers will ... READ MORE >
U.S. inflation expectations are well anchored as Fed nears decision
American inflation expectations remain remarkably well anchored given the price shock of the past two and a half years. Our preferred measure of inflation expectations—the Federal Reserve’s five-year forward, five-year breakeven rate and the five-year forward breakeven index—imply that professional ... READ MORE >
Jobless claims ease as housing starts drop
Initial jobless claims dropped by 5,000 last week to 238,000 yet remained elevated near a 10-month high. For now, the spike in new claims in the previous weeks looks a lot more like a seasonal issue than a deterioration in labor market conditions. In contrast, housing starts fell in May to the lowest ... READ MORE >
Retail sales and industrial production rise in May
The soft rebound in May’s retail sales was good news, suggesting that the economy might reach a soft landing sooner than expected. Total sales increased by 0.1% while the control group, which is the key metric that feeds into gross domestic production calculations, rose by 0.4%. Read more of RSM's ... READ MORE >
PCE inflation preview: From noise to norm, rate cuts are on the horizon
Following the release of the consumer price index and producer price index this week, we are now forecasting a 0.084% increase in the May personal consumption expenditures index, translating to a 2.6% increase on a year-over-year basis. This will appear in the forecast table as a 0.10% estimate. But we ... READ MORE >
Initial jobless claims jump as inflation continues to improve
Initial jobless claims jumped to 242,000 for the week ending June 8 from 229,000 the week before, the Labor Department reported on Thursday. The latest figure was the highest level in almost a year, nearing the threshold of 250,000 that in our view signals conditions for a possible recession. It ... READ MORE >
FOMC holds rates steady but is divided on their direction
The Federal Open Market Committee kept its policy rate in a range between 5.25% and 5.5% at its meeting on Wednesday while signaling through its dot plot forecast of interest rates that the committee would support at least one 25 basis-point rate cut this year. But the committee was split on the ... READ MORE >