Consumers Prices Jump Another 0.4 Percent in April, Led by Shelter

CPI data from the BLS chart by Mish

Please consider the BLS CPI Report for April 2023.

Month-Over-Month Details

  • The Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) rose 0.4 percent in April on a seasonally adjusted basis, after increasing 0.1 percent in March. 
  • The index for shelter was the largest contributor to the monthly all items increase, followed by increases in the index for used cars and trucks and the index for gasoline.
  • The increase in the gasoline index more than offset declines in other energy component indexes, and the energy index rose 0.6 percent in April. 
  • The food index was unchanged in April, as it was in March. The index for food at home fell 0.2 percent over the month while the index for food away from home rose 0.4 percent.
  • The index for all items less food and energy rose 0.4 percent in April, as it did in March. 
  • Indexes which increased in April include shelter, used cars and trucks, motor vehicle insurance, recreation, household furnishings and operations, and personal care. 
  • The index for airline fares and the index for new vehicles were among those that decreased over the month.

CPI Year-Over-Year

Year-Over-Year Details

  • The all items index increased 4.9 percent for the 12 months ending April. This was the smallest 12-month increase since the period ending April 2021, but it is nowhere near the Fed’s target.
  • The all items less food and energy index rose 5.5 percent over the last 12 months. 
  • The energy index decreased 5.1 percent for the 12 months ending April.
  • The food index increased 7.7 percent over the last year. 
  • The all items less food and energy index rose 5.6 percent over the last 12 months.
  • The shelter index is up 7.5 percent over the last year.

CPI Shelter Remains Hot, Just Not as Hot

Shelter Notes

  • Shelter comprises 34.59 percent of the CPI
  • Rent of primary residence is standard rent (not owner occupied), unfurnished without utilities.
  • Owners’ Equivalent Rent (OER), is the estimated price one would pay to rent one’s own house, unfurnished and without utilities. It is the single largest CPI component at 25.44 percent.
  • The shelter index increased 8.1 percent over the last year, accounting for over 60 percent of the total increase in all items less food and energy.

Price of Shelter

In March, I noted that shelter rose at least 0.5 percent for 14 consecutive months dating to January 2022. 

This month, shelter broke the string with a 0.4 percent rise, still a very hefty number for a Fed struggling to tame the CPI.

Most analysts have been expecting the price of shelter to come down. I have not been in that camp and still are not, although we are getting closer to smaller increases.

Mish Shelter Flashbacks

False Dawns

National Rent Price data from Apartment List, CPI data from the BLS, chart by Mish

All these “rent is declining” false dawns have been wrong for three reasons.

  1. They are based on new leases, not existing leases.
  2. They report increases all at once whereas the BLS smooths things out over a 12-month period due to the fact that not all leases renew in the same month.
  3. Seasonality

In the months ahead we may finally see rents ease due to the fact there are a record number of apartments under construction. Just don’t expect to see declines.

This post originated at MishTalk.Com.

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Salmo Trutta
Salmo Trutta
11 months ago
The FED should discontinue publishing income velocity. Vi can move in the opposite direction as Vt, the transactions’ velocity of money (Irving Fisher’s truistic metric, not Friedman’s). A bank originating a loan, which it distributes to a nonbank, e.g., a GSE, increases Vt, but does not affect Vi.
8dots
8dots
11 months ago
Mary Barra was out of Europe. Mary Barra was fully committed to EV. More than 50% of EV mfg lose money. GM under Mary Barra isn’t prepared for recession. The Fed is ready for Mary.
8dots
8dots
11 months ago
Rent y/y stalled. Rent is a reason for Williams to raise rates. Higher rates attract banks money, your money, to the Fed’s tools, ammo for the next recession.
KidHorn
KidHorn
11 months ago
I think inflation will keep going down. Including OER. When prices go up, producers and consumers look for cheaper alternatives. It takes a while for the adjustments to take place.
Chevy is about to unleash a lot of new EVs later this year and it looks like they’ll cost about the same as a comparable ICE car. And they’ll all be eligible for the full $7500 tax credit. I think we may see a big drop in ICE car prices as demand will really start to drop off.
Mjs357
Mjs357
11 months ago
Reply to  KidHorn
That’s a lot of Hopey Changey.
Matt3
Matt3
11 months ago
Let’s just accept “stagflation” as the new normal. The Fed can’t stop inflation as it’s currently pushed by policies and the politicians aren’t going to change course.
Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
11 months ago
Real estate and consequent rents are stubbornly hot, thanks mostly to the elected representatives of the people.
It would take a stubborn recession for morale to improve.
Christoball
Christoball
11 months ago
Time for my monthly compound inflation report.
If April 2023 CPI were calculated Biennially it would be 13.6%, stating
that prices are 13.6% higher than in April 2021. This is a .3%
rate drop from last months biennial CPI of 13.9% but is still an increase in prices.
If April 2023 CPI were calculated triennially, it would be 18.38%,
stating that
prices are 18.38% higher than in April 2020. This represents a 1.48%
rate increase from last months 16.9% triennial CPI figure.
Once again inflation is not simple inflation but is compound inflation. Triennial Compound CPI is 12.26% greater than FED targeted
2% cpi goals for this same 3 year time period.
CPI does not really reflect actual prices but is used
as a gauge to adjust Social Security and other retirement Cost of Living
Increases, and also I-bond rates.
It would take just shy of 6 years of ZERO PERCENT CPI to arrive at what the
FED’s targeted 2% CPI would have produced with April 2020 as the base
month. In only one month this is an increase of almost an added year from last months 5 year time period for the “ZERO PERCENT CPI NEUTRAL AFFECT ADJUSTMENT INDICATOR”. Interest rate increases and QT are still in order.
Boom times are when society leverages borrowed money and lives beyond its means. Recessions are when society lives within its means. Boom times and inflation only benefit those with access to borrowed money first, everyone else suffers.
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
11 months ago
Reply to  Christoball
It would take just shy of 6 years of ZERO PERCENT CPI to arrive at what the FED’s targeted 2% CPI would have produced with April 2020 as the base month.
And over the next 6 years, you can expect at least 20 to 30+ million people or more to retire in the US so how will inflation get better with so many people leaving the labor force? Robots? AI? Self-driving trucks? Where are they, we need them now!
Maybe in 5 years when we visit the doctor we’ll have to diagnose our own condition and inject ourselves with our own medicine the way we need to scan, bag and checkout our own groceries now. A truly self-service world would indicate peak capitalism. Lol.
Christoball
Christoball
11 months ago
Reply to  MPO45v2
“Maybe in 5 years when we visit the doctor we’ll have
to diagnose our own condition and inject ourselves with our own
medicine the way we need to scan, bag and checkout our own groceries
now. A truly self-service world would indicate peak capitalism”
It gets worse than that; We grumpy old men, will have to yell at ourselves to “get off my lawn”, while we ourselves are mowing it. Our wives will have to stare at us while we assume the roll of “Pool Boy” with our beer gut hanging over our skimpy 1970’s shorts supported by our pencil legs. Some say uncontrolled immigration from third world countries is the only solution.
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
11 months ago
Reply to  Christoball
Some say uncontrolled immigration from third world countries is the only solution.
It will NEVER be controlled because then businesses would need to pay fair and legal wages. the slaves have to come from somewhere “illegal” so they can be abused and under paid. It’s so bad that they have kids working in slaughterhouses now and no one goes to jail.
shamrock
shamrock
11 months ago
Reply to  MPO45v2
Not sure where you are coming up with your retirement numbers. The BLS projects the civilian labor force will increase by approximately 7.5m between 2021 and 2031. To meet your 20 or 30+ million drop the participation rate would have to go below 50%.
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
11 months ago
Reply to  shamrock
Is this the same BLS that gives us all these accurate numbers and forecasts? I get numbers from a variety of sources including the census but the projections are all subject to interpretation. And you may be counting “people” but what I count is actual working people and productivity. Mish had a recent post about productivity going down for 5 straight quarters and if that pattern holds then adding 7.5m people that are 1/3 as productive won’t really help to maintain the current lifestyle most people are used to having. It will be the same as adding 2 million people instead of 7.5.
The sheer volume of work that needs to be done is vastly under estimated. Here’s an example, virtually every major city in the US has 100+ year old water pipe infrastructure that needs to be replaced and we have a shortage of 400,000 construction workers right now. Same for bridges, roads, airports, utilities, etc. I got a letter from the city I’m in that they are adding 9% inflation charge to my water bill due to population increase, aging infrastructure and demand for water. It will be 10x worse in 10 years. Just wait and see for yourself then think back to this comment and ask yourself why you didn’t do anything knowing what was coming.
There are a variety of links for you to read thru if you really want to learn more. the census website is a fun place to hang out and gain insights.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
11 months ago
Reply to  Christoball
thanks for that. mish has missed this simple concept. inflation is cumulative and compounding. we are in total stagflation. will last at least a decade and probably 2 or 3, with demographic and productivity and crumbling empire………………argentina here we come.
shamrock
shamrock
11 months ago
What’s interesting is the huge monthly numbers from 2022 (march april may june all 1% or higher) keep dropping off. If the next 2 months stay in the 0.4% range the annual CPI will drop into the low 3’s.
Mjs357
Mjs357
11 months ago
I received a notice from my storage unit company (Natl chain) that my storage rent charges were going up 10%. I’m counting that as a rent increase.
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
11 months ago
I have a family member that lives in Austin Tx. they are renting and received a 10% increase in rent, lease expires end of June so they are looking for new place. To be fair, some rents (the high end) have come down but rents still high.
I wasn’t too shocked to see food inflation at 7.7 percent. I have been warning about food shortages for a while now and I think that is still coming. Not mentioned here as far as I saw was electricity jumping at 8.4 percent inflation year over year.
Overall the lower CPI was largely helped by lower energy costs but I don’t think that will last either but we’ll see. I don’t see how JPOW will lower rates under these current inflation circumstances.
So how do we profit from here? Well I’m looking at utilities now but it’s always a good time to buy long puts.
hmk
hmk
11 months ago
Reply to  MPO45v2
Brandon is still depleting the SPR so when it runs out oil will go back up and thus energy costs in the CPI.
Salmo Trutta
Salmo Trutta
11 months ago

“We are all Keynesians now”. The Keynesian economists have
achieved their objective, that there is no difference between money and liquid
assets.

See George Selgin “I’m glad to see, upon reading on, that Prof.
Summers explains himself in the comments. Still, I was taken aback upon first
seeing this tweet by him attributing SVB’s troubles to its having done what all
banks always do! (borrowing short to lend long).

Money is not neutral (“affect nominal variables and not real
variables”). ” inflation continues to outpace Americans’ rising wages – for the
25th straight month”. But don’t ask chatGPT. (chatGPT can read JSTOR without a prescription)

The FED is still too loose.

Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
11 months ago
Reply to  Salmo Trutta
Prof. Summers, the seed of all this mayhem, along with a couple of others, is a born again…?

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