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REPEAT:MNI 5 Things:Little Risk Seen For US Core PCE Prices

Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 16:21 GMT May 30/12:21 EST May 30
By Holly Stokes
     WASHINGTON (MNI) - The Personal Income and Outlays report for April will be
released Thursday, with the median forecast among analysts in an MNI survey
calling for a 0.4% rise in personal spending, a 0.3% rise in personal income,
and a 0.1% rise in the core PCE price index.
     Ahead of the release, we outline five themes for particular attention:
--NO CLEAR RISK TO CORE PCE PRICE INDEX
     Given the large amount of information already released in the PPI and CPI
reports, analysts' forecasts for the core PCE price index are typically very
accurate. In the past year, there have been three overestimates and four
underestimates, giving no clear directional risk. Further, apart from a large
0.4pp overestimate in June, misses have been limited to a narrow 0.1pp.
Consequently, analysts predictions for a 0.1% rise in core PCE price index are
likely to come to fruition. 
--CORE PCE PRICE INDEX Y/Y COULD SLIP
     Core PCE price index month/month is expected to rise 0.1% in April, which
would actually knock the year/year down a tick to 1.8% due to base effects, just
teetering on the edge of rounding to an unchanged 1.9%. While other inflation
measures have been heating up, the core PCE price index - the Fed's preferred
measure of inflation - has stayed notably just below the target. As the last
Personal Income and Outlays report that the Fed will see before their June
meeting, market participants will be watching to see if the preferred measure
continues to evade the 2.0% target. Though a 1.8% year/year would likely not
provide much market pressure, as attention remains on nonfarm payrolls, a softer
reading could temper concerns of a fourth rate hike in the year.
--ENERGY TO PROVIDE BOOST
     Last month, the overall PCE price index saw a lackluster flat reading,
largely held down by energy prices, which plummeted 2.8% month/month, chained.
This was the largest decline since May 2017. However, as suggested by a 1.4%
gain in CPI energy in the already released report, energy should help boost the
PCE price index.
--FIRST LOOK AT SECOND QUARTER PCE
Analysts look for a second month of 0.4% gains in current dollar PCE. First
quarter consumption was off to a lackluster start, with a soft 0.2% gain in
January and a flat reading in February partially offset by a 0.4% rise in March.
Now, April is expected to give a first look at second quarter's strength after
the habitual first quarter slump. A healthy print in the core retail sales
measure, which feeds into PCE, gives analysts hope that goods, alongside
services, should see a pickup.
--SAVINGS RATE COULD RETURN TO DOWNWARD TREND
     After falling to a 12-year-low in December, attention is once again on a
falling savings rate. In 2017, a negative relationship between average hourly
earnings and the personal savings rate began to form, highlighting a potentially
unstable rate of spending to income growth. However, with the boost to
disposable income from tax cuts and the lackluster consumer spending, the
savings rate rose slightly in previous months and began to alleviate concerns.
Now, as consumption looks to be picking back up amidst a narrative of
conflicting wage data, the savings rate may be setting for another decline from
its already low levels.
--MNI Washington Bureau; +1 202-371-2121; email: holly.stokes@marketnews.com

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