Current:Home > MarketsHigher gas prices likely pushed up inflation in August, though other costs probably slowed -WealthConverge Strategies
Higher gas prices likely pushed up inflation in August, though other costs probably slowed
View
Date:2025-04-24 10:16:15
WASHINGTON (AP) — A sharp increase in gas prices likely pushed inflation higher in August compared with a year ago, yet a measure excluding energy and food costs is expected to fall for the fifth straight month, suggesting that the Federal Reserve’s interest rate hikes are still bringing down prices for many goods and services.
The consumer price index is projected to have increased 3.6% last month from a year earlier, according to economists’ forecasts compiled by data provider FactSet. The increase would be up from 3.2% in July, though still far below the peak of 9.1% in June 2022.
Yet core prices, which exclude food and energy and are monitored closely by the Federal Reserve, are likely to cool to 4.3% in August from a year ago, down from a 4.7% annual pace in July. The Fed follows core prices because they can provide a better read on where inflation is headed.
If the forecasts are accurate, such data will likely fuel optimism that inflation is coming under control, despite the rise in gas prices, and raise the odds the Fed will skip an interest rate hike at its meeting next week. While more expensive gas could elevate inflation this month as well, most economists forecast that inflation will decline through the end of the year as the cost of new and used cars, rents, and furniture decline.
“The longer-run trend is coming down,” said Alan Detmeister, an economist at UBS and former staff economist at the Fed. “There is month-to-month noise ... But we’re on the right track.”
Cooling inflation has also bolstered hopes that the economy could actually experience a rare “soft landing,” in which growth and hiring slow enough to bring down price growth but not so much as to result in a deep recession.
On a monthly basis, consumer prices likely jumped 0.6% in August, the biggest increase in more than a year. Gas prices spiked about 11% in August, economists estimate, though they have since levelled off: According to AAA, the average nationwide price at the pump was $3.84 on Tuesday, little changed from a month ago.
Economists forecast that air fares likely also rose in August from July. But they expect used cars, which soared in price during the pandemic and its aftermath, will fall as much as 3% in August from July, and new cars could also decline or at least stay unchanged. Apartment rental costs are expected to keep rising at about a 0.4% monthly pace, but that is half the rate of a year ago and could fall further later this year.
Grocery prices are increasing more slowly after skyrocketing in the wake of supply disruptions brought on by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last year. The increase has strained many households’ budgets. Even with more modest increases each month, grocery costs are still 3.6% higher than a year ago.
Federal Reserve officials are becoming more open to the idea that inflation is coming under control, though chair Jerome Powell said last month it was still “too high.”
But in his high-profile speech at Jackson Hole, Powell said that the Fed would proceed “carefully” with any further rate hikes, which many economists saw as an opening for the Fed to skip a rate increase at its September 19-20 meeting.
The Fed has lifted its benchmark interest rate 11 times in the past 12 meetings to about 5.4%, the highest level in 22 years. It increased the rate a quarter-point in July after leaving it unchanged in June.
Lorie Logan, president of the Federal Reserve’s Dallas branch, said last week that “another skip could be appropriate” at its next meeting, “but skipping does not imply stopping.”
Investors see only a 7% chance of a rate hike next week, according to CME’s FedWatch. But they have priced in a 38% change for an increase at the Fed’s subsequent meeting in November.
The European Central Bank is also contemplating lifting its key interest rate at its next meeting Thursday, though officials could choose to also skip an increase. The European economy is nearing recession as it struggles with high inflation and rising borrowing costs.
The 20 countries that use the euro currency are expected to grow just 0.8% this year, according to a gloomy forecast issued Monday by the European Commission, the European Union’s executive arm. Germany’s economy, the EU’s largest, is projected to shrink 0.4%. Inflation in the EU is higher than in the U.S. — it was 5.3% in July — though that is half of the 10.6% peak reached in October.
veryGood! (78)
Related
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Researchers found the planet's deepest under-ocean sinkhole — and it's so big, they can't get to the bottom
- Gambling bill to allow lottery and slots remains stalled in the Alabama Senate
- In a first, an orangutan is seen using a medicinal plant to treat injury
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- Maui suing cellphone carriers over alerts it says people never got about deadly wildfires
- Who is favored to win the 2024 Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs?
- California man who testified against Capitol riot companion is sentenced to home detention
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- TikToker Isis Navarro Reyes Arrested After Allegedly Selling Misbranded Ozempic
Ranking
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- Mick Jagger wades into politics, taking verbal jab at Louisiana state governor at performance
- Tornadoes hit parts of Texas, more severe weather in weekend forecast
- Southern California city detects localized tuberculosis outbreak
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Russell Specialty Books has everything you'd want in a bookstore, even two pet beagles
- Swiss company to build $184 million metal casting facility in Georgia, hiring 350
- MLB announces changes to jerseys for 2025 after spring controversy
Recommendation
Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
Why is 'Star Wars' Day on May 4? What is it? Here's how the unofficial holiday came to be
'Indiana is the new Hollywood:' Caitlin Clark draws a crowd. Fever teammates embrace it
NYPD body cameras show mother pleading “Don’t shoot!” before officers kill her 19-year-old son
Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
Slain Charlotte officer remembered as hard-charging cop with soft heart for his family
New Jersey governor sets July primary and September special election to fill Payne’s House seat
Why Canelo Álvarez will fight Jaime Munguía after years of refusing fellow Mexican boxers