empty
11.03.2022 06:48 AM
Households squeezed as US inflation accelerates

According to the Labour Department, US consumer prices surged in February, forcing Americans to dig deeper to pay for rent, food and gasoline However, experts believe inflation is poised to accelerate even further as the conflict between Russia and Ukraine drives up the costs of crude oil and other commodities.

This image is no longer relevant

Massive price rises have already led to the biggest annual increase in inflation in 40 years, however, not surprising the markets. Inflation was already haunting the economy before Russia's operation in Ukraine last month. However, it could still erode President Joe Biden's popularity.

The Federal Reserve is expected to start raising interest rates as early as next Wednesday.

With inflation nearly four times the U.S. central bank's 2-per-cent target, economists are expecting as many as seven rate hikes this year or larger one-off hikes.

Lower-income households bear the brunt of high inflation as they spend more of their income on food and gasoline.

"Consumers' shock at rapidly rising gas prices at the pump will continue to put pressure on the Fed and policy makers to do something, anything, to slow down the speed at which prices everywhere are moving higher," Chris Zaccarelli, chief investment officer at Independent Advisor Alliance in Charlotte, N.C, said.

"There are many people who point out that the Fed can't control supply chains or increase the efficiency of our ports, but they never could. What they can control is interest rates and they are much too low."

The consumer price index increased 0.8% last month after gaining 0.6% in January, the Labor Department said on Thursday. Petrol (+6.6%) accounted for almost a third of the CPI increase. This is despite a preliminary 0.8% fall in petrol prices in January. Food prices jumped by 1.0%, with the cost of groceries consumed at home rising by 1.4%.

In the 12 months through February, the CPI shot up 7.9%, the biggest year-on-year increase since January 1982. That followed a 7.5% jump in January. However, as we said, the rise in CPI in February did not surprise economists and was in line with forecasts.

Last month's CPI data does not fully capture the spike in oil prices. Prices shot up more than 30%, with global benchmark Brent hitting a 2008 high at $139 a barrel, before retreating on Thursday to $118 a barrel.

Notably, the United States have imposed harsh sanctions on Moscow, with President Joe Biden on Tuesday banning imports of Russian oil into the country.

Gasoline prices in the US are averaging a record $4.318 per gallon compared with $3.469 a month ago.

According to David Kelly, chief global strategist at JPMorgan Funds in New York, if gasoline averaged close to $4.20 for the year, that would add over $1,000 to the expenses of the average household.

The Russia-Ukraine war, which has also boosted prices of wheat and other commodities, is seen keeping inflation uncomfortably high into the second quarter.

Current inflation is of a multi-component nature. In particular, it was also caused by a shift in spending on goods away from services during the COVID-19 pandemic and the trillions of dollars invested in the fight against the pandemic. The resulting surge in pent-up demand faced capacity constraints as quarantine made it difficult to deliver raw materials to factories and finished products to consumers.

Excluding volatile food and energy components, the core consumer price index rose 0.5% last month after growing 0.6% in January. This falls short of Russia's 1.52%, but is still a significant gain.

The 0.5% increase in housing costs, such as rental housing, as well as hotel and motel accommodation, accounted for more than 40% of the increase in the so-called core CPI.

Rents jumped by 0.6%. Consumers also paid more for leisure, household goods and operations, vehicle insurance, and clothing and personal care products.

Airfares rose 5.2% as a sharp decline in coronavirus infections increased demand for travel, at least among Americans.

The annual core CPI raced up 6.4%. That was the largest year-on-year gain since August 1982 and followed a 6% increase in January.

Most economists had expected the annual core CPI rate to peak in March just above 6.5% and retreating in April as large increases from last spring started to drop out of the calculation.

"We still think that is the most likely outcome, but there is a risk that energy passthrough effects from the latest spike in oil prices will slow that process," Lou Crandall said.

"Exactly how the Fed will balance the impact of higher oil prices on the inflation data against the 'energy tax' hit to incomes and real spending remains unclear."

Tightening labor market conditions will also contribute to higher inflation, despite monthly wage growth stalling in February. There were a near record 11.3 million job openings at the end of January. The jobs-workers gap was 4.8 million, accounting for 2.9% of the labor force. Rising prices are likely to encourage workers to take up vacancies.

So far, however, unemployment figures are disappointing.

A separate report from the Labor Department on Thursday showed initial claims for state unemployment benefits increased 11,000 to a seasonally adjusted 227,000 for the week ended March 5, still at levels consistent with a tight labor market.

Economists had forecast 217,000 applications for the latest week. Claims have dropped from a record high of 6.149 million in early April of 2020.

Wall Street's main indexes fell on Thursday.

Technology stocks were the leaders in the decline.

While the numbers matched economists' expectations, investor fears are rife that inflation will accelerate further in the coming months as Russia's military actions in Ukraine drive up the costs of oil and other commodities.

Nine of the 11 major S&P sectors declined, with technology stocks falling the most, 1.9%, after leading a Wall Street rally in the previous session. Chipmakers fell 2.2%.

Energy shares rose 1.2% after taking a breather on Wednesday.

"Bottom line is inflation is elevated and there's more to come," Peter Cardillo said.

"I was looking for inflation to peak in the second quarter but now that depends on oil. Perhaps we won't see any relief until the end of the year."

Fed Chair Jerome Powell last week said he would back a quarter point rate increase when the US central bank meets next week and would be "prepared to move more aggressively" later if inflation does not abate as fast as expected. Traders now see a 95% probability of a 25-basis-point hike by the Fed in its March meeting. However, the first hike may be even more serious.

Citigroup shares dropped 2.1%. Despite this, Goldman Sachs Group Inc said it was closing its operations in Russia, becoming the first major Wall Street bank to leave the country following Moscow's special operation in Ukraine.

Meanwhile, negotiations between Russia and Ukraine have yielded no progress.

At 09:55 US Eastern Time, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 0.74%, at 33,040,13, the S&P 500 was down 0.92%, at 4,238,37, and the Nasdaq Composite was down 1.44%, at 13,064,84.

Megacap growth stocks Microsoft, Meta Platforms and Tesla all slipped more than 1%, while Nvidia and Apple dropped over 2.5% each.

Shares of Amazon.com jumped 4.8% after its board approved a 20-for-1 split of the e-commerce giant's common stock and authorized a $10 billion buyback plan.

Egor Danilov,
Analytical expert of InstaForex
© 2007-2025
选择时间框架
5
分钟
15
分钟
30
分钟
1
小时
4
小时
1
1
通过InstaForex赚取加密货币汇率变动的收益。
下载MetaTrader 4并开启您的第一笔交易。
  • Grand Choice
    Contest by
    InstaForex
    InstaForex always strives to help you
    fulfill your biggest dreams.
    JOIN CONTEST

推荐文章

美國市場新聞摘要:美中貿易協議提振有限,美國股市在6月12日收低

美國股市在美中達成貿易協議後收低。儘管有正面消息流出,投資者還是開始積極對多頭部位進行獲利了結,導致價格回調。

Ekaterina Kiseleva 16:31 2025-06-12 UTC+2

Robinhood 從 S&P 500 中移除 — 多米諾效應衝擊全球市場

Robinhood的股價下跌,此前該交易平台被排除在S&P 500之外。華納兄弟的股價在公司宣佈重組計劃後下跌。

14:54 2025-06-11 UTC+2

每日對比:日經指數上升,歐元下滑,全球市場屏息以待美中會談

特斯拉領漲,市場回升 週二,由於特斯拉股票的大幅上漲,標普500指數收高。投資者情緒受到提振,因為大家對於美中貿易談判進展的希望增加,預期將解決今年大部分時間對全球市場造成壓力的長期關稅僵局。

14:31 2025-06-11 UTC+2

6月11日美國市場新聞摘要

美國股票市場已達到預期水準,現在進入「靜默偵察階段」,投資者正等待關鍵通脹數據的發布。即將公布的數據可能會影響指數走向的基調,並影響當前漲勢是否能持續的前景。

Ekaterina Kiseleva 13:57 2025-06-11 UTC+2

今日對比:日經指數上升,歐元下跌,全球在美中會談前屏息以待

S&P 500 在週二的交易收盤時收於正值區域,這得益於 Tesla 股價的強勁上漲。投資者情緒轉向樂觀,因為對於美中貿易談判能取得建設性進展,以解決長期以來困擾全球市場的關稅僵局的希望重新浮現。

Thomas Frank 07:48 2025-06-11 UTC+2

利率上升:市場等待消費者價格指數(CPI),特朗普與馬斯克發生衝突,Qualcomm收購Alphawave

5月份的CPI報告預計在星期三發布。預算法案在特朗普和馬斯克的公開分歧中成為焦點。

14:05 2025-06-10 UTC+2

6月10日美國市場新聞摘要

S&P 500 和 Nasdaq 100 指數顯著上升,這是由於對即將到來的美中貿易談判持樂觀預期所推動。投資者押注於潛在的關稅緩解,這可能成為推動更廣泛全球經濟復甦的催化劑。

Ekaterina Kiseleva 12:52 2025-06-10 UTC+2

Robinhood 從 S&P 500 降級 — 多米諾效應影響整個市場

美國股市週一交易小幅收漲,主要因亞馬遜和Alphabet股票的上漲帶動。同時,全球投資者密切關注美國和中國之間重新展開的對話,這是為緩解今年大部分時間困擾市場的貿易緊張局勢所做的持續努力的一部分。

Thomas Frank 12:49 2025-06-10 UTC+2

市場等待CPI,利率上升,特朗普與馬斯克交鋒,高通收購Alphawave

由於對唐納德·特朗普關稅政策的憂慮導致4月份出現大幅拋售後,股票市場強勁回歸。華爾街在週末結束時表現出色,標準普爾500指數 (.SPX) 自2月底以來首次收盤突破6000點。

Thomas Frank 11:49 2025-06-09 UTC+2

泰坦之爭:Musk與Trump的對決,投資者計算損失

美國股市指數週四收低,因波動交易和特斯拉股價大幅下跌拖累。特朗普總統與中國領導人習近平的外交開局引發的投資者熱情,被這家電動汽車製造商的急劇下跌所掩蓋。

Thomas Frank 11:45 2025-06-06 UTC+2
现在无法通话?
提出您的问题,用 在线帮助.
Widget callback
 

Dear visitor,

Your IP address shows that you are currently located in the USA. If you are a resident of the United States, you are prohibited from using the services of InstaFintech Group including online trading, online transfers, deposit/withdrawal of funds, etc.

If you think you are seeing this message by mistake and your location is not the US, kindly proceed to the website. Otherwise, you must leave the website in order to comply with government restrictions.

Why does your IP address show your location as the USA?

  • - you are using a VPN provided by a hosting company based in the United States;
  • - your IP does not have proper WHOIS records;
  • - an error occurred in the WHOIS geolocation database.

Please confirm whether you are a US resident or not by clicking the relevant button below. If you choose the wrong option, being a US resident, you will not be able to open an account with InstaForex anyway.

We are sorry for any inconvenience caused by this message.