Despite the Fed's decision to raise interest rates, wholesale prices declined unexpectedly in February, providing some encouragement for inflation.
Labor Department data show the producer price index dropped 0.1% for March, against an estimate of 0.3%, and after gaining 0.3% in January. Compared to the previous month's downwardly revised 5.7%, the index increased 4.6% over the past 12 months.
Food, energy, and trade were excluded from the index, so the rise was 0.2% rather than 0.5%. That was the same rate as in January, 4.4% year-over-year. In the absence of food and energy, the PPI was flat, as opposed to the 0.4% increase expected.
A 0.2% drop in goods prices fueled the headline decline, compared with a 1.2% increase in January. There was a 2.2% decline in the final demand for food, while there was a 0.2% decline in the final demand for energy.
During the past year, chicken egg prices had soared, but plunged 36.1% in the past month.
Moreover, according to data not adjusted for inflation, retail sales fell 0.4% in February, according to the Commerce Department. A 1.8% drop in auto sales dragged down the total, which was in line with expectations.
In the month of December, revenue from food services and drinking establishments declined by 2.2% but was still up 15.3% on an annual basis. There was a 2.5% drop in furniture and home furnishings stores, while there was a 1.8% decline in non-department stores.
Similarly, the Empire State Manufacturing Survey for March posted a reading of -24.6, 19 points lower than a month earlier. Companies reporting expansion versus contraction are represented by the percentage difference. It was estimated that Dow Jones would reach -7.8.
Inventories and new orders decreased precipitously, resulting in a big decline. There was a decline in hiring as well as a decline in prices.
As of February 18, 6% of consumers had increased their prices, according to the Labor Department.
This was the lowest 12-month CPI rate since September 2021, despite being well above the 2% level the Fed considers ideal.
When the Federal Reserve meets next week, markets still expect the Fed to raise interest rates despite the downward trend in inflation and recent turmoil in the banking sector.
Federal funds rates are expected to rise by 0.25 percentage points, bringing the benchmark borrowing rate to 4.75%-5%.
A futures contract on Wednesday morning also implied a peak, or terminal, rate of about 4.77%, suggesting that the Fed is pivoting away from its tightening regime.
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