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Consumer inflation slows to lowest rate since February 2021 | CNN Business

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Consumer inflation slows to lowest rate since February 2021 | CNN Business



CNN
 — 

Inflation continues to loosen its grip on American consumers, with price hikes slowing by the most in three and a half years, according to new data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics released Wednesday.

The Consumer Price Index, a measurement of price changes for a commonly purchased basket of goods and services, briskly retreated from a 2.9% annual increase in July to 2.5% in August, marking the lowest annual increase since February 2021 and landing at a rate that matched the average seen in 2018.

On a monthly basis, prices were unchanged from July’s increase of 0.2%.

August’s overall inflation print came in better than expected (economists, by consensus, were projecting a 2.5% annual gain and 0.2% lift for the month). However, a closely watched measure of underlying inflation showed that some price pressures — specifically, housing-related costs — remained stubbornly elevated.

As such, this all but cements a quarter-point rate cut from the Federal Reserve at its monetary policy meeting next week, Ben Ayers, senior economist for Nationwide, wrote in a note issued Wednesday.

“The road to normal inflation hit a bump in August as lingering pressures for housing and service costs once again cropped up,” Ayers wrote. “This should clinch a smaller, [quarter-point] rate cut from the Fed next week as Fed officials remain wary to feed any lingering price momentum for the economy.”

Fed officials are widely expected to begin loosening monetary policy next week by trimming the central bank’s benchmark rate, making it less expensive for individuals and businesses to borrow money. Inflation has slowed dramatically since central bankers began their historic tightening cycle in March 2022; and while some price pressures still linger, their focus has shifted to the health of the labor market.

Economists were expecting the annual rate would slow significantly last month to 2.6% annually, according to FactSet. That’s in part due to favorable year-ago comparisons: Last summer’s gas price spike jolted inflation higher in August 2023.

Falling gas prices helped bring overall inflation lower last month, dropping by 0.6% for the month and 10.3% annually.

Grocery prices held flat for the month, and overall food inflation was up 0.1% in August and 2.1% annually.

Excluding food and energy, which are typically volatile categories, the core CPI gauge rose 0.3% from July, a faster-than-expected increase that held the annual rate at 3.2%.

Economists had projected core would increase 0.2% and hold at 3.2% for the year ended in August.

The cost of owning and renting a home continued to be the leading driver of inflation, the BLS noted in the report. The shelter index rose 0.5% for the month and was the “main factor” in the overall increase. On an annual basis, it’s up 5.2% and accounts for more than 70% of the annual increase in core CPI.

Shelter, which accounts for more than one-third of the overall CPI, remains the biggest impediment to inflation’s descent. However, economists say, it’s only a matter of time before that hurdle gives.

That’s because the BLS’ measurement of housing-related prices is a very lagged and amorphous process (including estimating the rental value of owner-occupied homes).

During the past year, the CPI’s shelter index has better reflected this: After peaking at 8.2% in March 2023, it has slowly but steadily moderated each month since and fell to a two-year low of 5.1% in July.

However, it popped back higher in August.

“It’s a long lag between when current market conditions can show up, just as it’s a long time between tenant turnover, so that can delay when you see current market conditions reflected,” Sarah House, senior economist at Wells Fargo, told CNN in an interview Wednesday.

“But, it also could reflect that we’ve seen a bit of a shift in preferences, whether that’s remote work or just demographics, where you have a larger share of the population now of the age where single-family living is more attractive, which is keeping some upward pressure,” she said.

This story is developing and will be updated.

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