US May CPI forecasts from 15 investment bank analysts. Hot, hot, hot … FOMC sweating.
Wednesday's CPI release is the most consequential data point ahead of the June 17 Fed decision, and a hot print would sharply reinforce the rate hike narrative that has taken hold since the start of the US-Iran conflict. Money markets have already moved aggressively, pricing a near-certain 25 basis-point increase by December. The question is whether energy-driven inflation is now bleeding into core categories, which would give the Fed little room to hold. Thursday's PPI figures add a second layer, with pipeline pressures potentially signalling where headline inflation is heading in coming months.
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US May CPI due Wednesday is seen as a critical test ahead of the June 17 Fed decision, with money markets pricing a 98% chance of a rate hike by December amid persistent inflation.
Summary:
- May CPI is due Wednesday, with May PPI following Thursday, together providing the key inflation inputs ahead of the Fed's June 17 meeting
- US money markets price a 98% probability of a 25 basis-point rate hike by December, per LSEG data
- May jobs data came in well above forecasts, effectively extinguishing rate cut expectations that had appeared credible before the US-Iran conflict began
- Analysts say a stronger-than-expected CPI print will make it very difficult for policymakers to argue for further easing, given inflation is already running persistently above the Fed's 2% target
- Energy price passthrough into broader consumer prices is a key watch point in this week's releases
Wednesday's US consumer price index for May (due 8.30 am US Eastern time / 1230 GMT) has taken on heightened significance as the last major inflation reading before the Federal Reserve's rate decision on June 17, with markets now firmly pricing a hike rather than debating the pace of cuts.
Money markets assign a 98% probability to a 25 basis-point rate increase by December, according to LSEG data, a dramatic repositioning from earlier in the year when easing had appeared the more likely path. That shift accelerated after May payrolls came in well ahead of forecasts, removing the labour market softness that had underpinned the rate cut case.
The focus for Wednesday's release is not just the headline number but the degree to which elevated energy costs, amplified by the US-Iran conflict and ongoing Hormuz disruption, are feeding through into broader consumer prices. Analysts at AJ Bell note that a hotter-than-expected print will leave policymakers with little credible basis to resist further tightening, given inflation is already tracking persistently above the Fed's 2% target.
Thursday's producer price index will extend the picture, offering a window into pipeline pressures that typically precede moves in consumer inflation over coming months.
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Print from the Wall Street Journal (gated):
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.提供 MainLink:Investinglive RSS Breaking News Feed
