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Benign US inflation allows the Fed to focus on jobs

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Benign US inflation allows the Fed to focus on jobs

Meanwhile, the personal spending and income report incorporates all the revisions in yesterday’s benchmarking exercise with income hugely revised up to magic away the significant discrepancy between the expenditure and the income measure of national output. This leaves the savings rate looking in a better place at 4.8% versus just below 3% before the revision. Nonetheless, real household disposable income rose just 0.1% MoM for the third straight month and is unlikely to pick up meaningfully given the apparent cooling in the jobs market over the summer. This points to weaker consumer spending growth ahead unless households increasingly run down savings and accumulate more debt.

With regard to consumer spending, we continue to highlight the bifurcation going on. According to the most recent data available, the top 20% of households by income accounted for around 41% of total consumer spending, more than the 38% accounted for the lowest 60% of households by income. The situation facing these two groups couldn’t be more different.

The top 20% have been far less impacted by inflation, given their incomes are so high, and are far more likely to have stock market wealth and property wealth, which has soared in value. Moreover, high interest rates have likely benefitted many in this income category given they are more likely to either own their home outright or have locked in a long-term mortgage at perhaps rates as low as 3.5%. At the same time they can put their cash in money market funds at what were 5%+ rates. Looking as a whole, everything that could go right financially for this group has gone right and their spending has been very strong.

It is a very different story for the bottom 60% of households. They are more likely to be among the 40% or so of households that rent their home, with rent increases rapidly eating into spending power, while the Fed’s tri-annual survey of consumer finances shows they have far less stock market exposure through either direct holdings or their 401k plans. They are also more likely to borrow to finance spending and those high borrowing costs have contributed to sharp increases in loan delinquencies over the past 18 months.

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