June saw a 3% drop in inflation, a positive sign for the Fed’s rate-hike efforts.
Annual Inflation Slows to 3% in June
The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Wednesday that annual inflation has slowed to 3% in June, which is a positive development in light of the Federal Reserve’s efforts to lower price pressures by raising interest rates.
The much-anticipated update to the consumer price index shows that, while inflation is still too high, it is cooling in response to the Fed’s aggressive interest rate hikes. The Fed has raised rates by a large degree since last March, with the target rate now 5% to 5.25%.
Inflation had been running at 4% the month before. This report marks 12 straight months of declines in annual inflation after the rate peaked at a whopping 9.1% last June.
Core Inflation Falls to 4.8%
Meanwhile, “core inflation,” which strips out volatile food and energy prices, fell to 4.8% in the year ending in June.
The Fed paused rate hiking last month for the first time since its tightening cycle began, although officials were keen to indicate that the pause was expected to be temporary and penciled in the possibility of two more rate revisions by the end of the year.
Soaring inflation has battered households over the past two years and upended some support for President Joe Biden and his economic agenda. Republicans have used the rising prices as a cudgel to attack the administration and have blamed big spending bills, such as Biden’s pandemic relief legislative package, as major drivers of inflation.
The country’s banking sector is still being closely watched following the sudden failure of Silicon Valley Bank in March. SVB’s downfall acted as a bit of a domino and led to a few other bank collapses, as well as some regional banks seeing their stock values plunge.
The federal government was able to step in and stymie the worst of the fallout, but economists are still keeping an eye on the banking system, given the overall volatility of the economy amid the Fed’s rate hiking.
One strong spot for the economy is the red-hot labor market, which, while showing a few signs of cooling, is still roaring despite the barrage of rate hikes.
The economy added 209,000 jobs in June, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday. While still strong, that was below forecast expectations of 225,000, and it was the first report in months that came in below the consensus prediction. It was also the slowest pace of job growth since December 2020.
Another curious development in recent months is how the housing market, which many economists considered to have fallen into a recession last year, has heated back up given issues with the supply of existing homes.
In fact, home prices rose to record levels in May, increasing 0.7% nationally compared with April at a seasonally adjusted rate, according to a report from Black Knight released on Monday.
Because mortgage rates are now so high, those who locked in sub-3% bargain mortgage rates during the peak of the pandemic are now holding off on selling. That means the inventory of homes is not keeping pace with demand and is driving up prices.
As of this past week, the average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage was 6.81%, according to Freddie Mac. Mortgage rates are now the highest they have been since November when they skyrocketed to above 7%.
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