Economic surprises are both positive and negative. In the case of US CPI releases, that is a truth that has been forgotten by many of us. But, at long last, the Bureau of Labor Statistics finally presented some unexpectedly good data on US CPI inflation.
Headline inflation (that is, inflation computed using all the components of the consumer basket) rose 0.2% month-on-month (MoM) and 3.0% year-on-year (YoY) (down from 4.0% in May). Core inflation (inflation excluding the volatile food and energy components) also rose 0.2% MoM and 4.8% YoY (down from 5.3% in May).
To put these data into perspective, the figure below shows the three main components of the CPI measured over 12 months.
The first of these is the component for shelter, which by now is the most important factor pushing up inflation. The cost of shelter depends on the stock of rental contracts – not just those signed in the last month – and therefore moves very sluggishly. However, there is a lot of other information indicating that rents have stopped rising. That means that the contribution of shelter to inflation will be falling in the coming months.
The second component is the core inflation excluding shelter. It is also contributing less and less to overall inflation.
The third group of components is food and energy. While food prices rose 5.7% YoY, energy prices have fallen -16.7% YoY and is pushing overall inflation down.