CPI Declines Due to Gasoline But Food and Shelter Costs Jump Again

CPI Data from BLS, chart by Mish

Please consider the BLS Consumer Price Index report for December.

Key Details Month-Over-Month

  • The Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) declined 0.1 percent in December on a seasonally adjusted basis, after increasing 0.1 percent in November.
  • The index for gasoline declined 9.5 percent and was by far the largest contributor to the monthly all items decrease. 
  • The energy index decreased 4.5 percent over the month. 
  • The the fuel oil index was down 16.5 percent but energy services including electricity and piped natural gas rose 1.0 percent and 3.0 percent respectively.
  • The food index increased 0.3 percent over the month with the food at home index rising 0.2 percent. 
  • The shelter index rose 0.8 percent.
  • The index for all items less food and energy rose 0.3 percent in December, after rising 0.2 percent in November. 
  • Indexes which increased in December include the shelter, household furnishings and operations, motor vehicle insurance, recreation, and apparel indexes. 
  • The indexes for used cars and trucks, and airline fares were among those that decreased over the month.

CPI Year-Over-Year

CPI Data from BLS, chart by Mish

CPI Year-Over-Year Details 

  • The all items index increased 6.5 percent for the 12 months ending December. This was the smallest 12-month increase since the period ending October 2021.
  • The all items less food and energy index rose 5.7 percent over the last 12 months.
  • The energy index increased 7.3 percent for the 12 months ending December.
  • The food index increased 10.4 percent over the last year.
  • The index for shelter rose 7.5 percent.

Spotlight Shelter

National Rent Prices Decline Again, But Reports Are Very Misleading

Shelter jumped again as expected in this corner. 

Economists have generally been expecting shelter costs to decline based on declines in national rent indexes but I have not been in that camp. 

On January 5, I cautioned National Rent Prices Decline Again, But Reports Are Very Misleading

The key idea is national rent index is for new leases not existing and there were enormous increases for eight months in 2022 that have yet to be smoothed out by the BLS. 

Looking Ahead

  • Rent: The pace of increases in rent will slow at some point but don’t expect anything like the above chart in National Rent prices. Rent declines are unlikely at least until the massive pipeline of apartments under construction is completed. Even then, that may be more of a local thing than nationally. 
  • Gasoline: According to the AAA, the price of gasoline is about where it was a week ago and a month ago. With China reopening there is upward pressure on energy. There is also upward pressure due to more Russia sanction talk by the US and EU.
  • Food: The cost of fertilizer has declined and with that some expect the price of food will decline as well. Perhaps so, but color me skeptical. Corn futures have been steady and soybean futures have generally been rising. Cattle futures are close to the top of their range.

All things considered, I suspect this report is as good as it gets for a while. 

How Long Will High Inflation Persist? What Happened to the Great Moderation?

For a longer-term outlook, please see my report How Long Will High Inflation Persist? What Happened to the Great Moderation?

This post originated on MishTalk.Com.

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MJS357
MJS357
1 year ago
I have not seen any discussion anywhere IRT payrolls/wage increases due to 1. Companies generally raising wages in the new year, 2. The Fed govt raised wages for employees, 3. Some state wages increased 4. 27 States raised min wages many $1 average. Wage/price spiral coming?
Ultracrepidarian
Ultracrepidarian
1 year ago
Mish ….
The steep decline in the spot price of crude was an anomaly, no one picked up on this. Due to the arcitc weather blast after christmas, the Motiva refinery in Port Arthur shut down for a week. They commonly buy 600,000 barrels of crude per day for processing but they stopped for a week. WTI crashed from $81.50 to $72 in three days. However, they are back online now and crude has snapped back to $79 already….and is headed much higher…..for this and other reasons I’m looking for the CPI number next month to be back to 7.5% and all hell will break loose in the markets……please everyone be careful out there…..
1-shot
1-shot
1 year ago
Great news compared to previous 9-10% inflation, but at what cost? The housing and vehicle markets have started falling apart, which is exactly what the fed said they wanted. This will impact a huge swath of the economy well beyond the cost of housing and lead to a lot of job losses and business closures later in the year. Add the fact that folks are scared, uncertain about the future and simply can’t afford to borrow and spend like before when interest rates were 0% and it all points to the “R word” for late 2023 into 2024.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
1 year ago
Reply to  1-shot
Not to worry.
The Fed said they would back off as soon as they got inflation to 2%.
UP to 2%, not down to 2%,
Fortunately for them there is no market clearing price for credibility.
Thetenyear
Thetenyear
1 year ago
It appears as if inflation has peaked yet it’s lingering effects are still embedded in the economy.
Prices are still 14% higher than they were two years ago while real wages have fallen 21 months in a row. Borrowing costs have expolded as mortgage rates have doubled and the ten year has quadrupled.
Even though inflation has peaked it’s impact will be felt for a long time.
yooj
yooj
1 year ago
Although China reopening will increase demand for energy, which is inflationary, it also will increase the supply of Chinese goods. The inflation is predominantly supply side. China reopening is net disinflationary.
Christoball
Christoball
1 year ago
The mystery of compound inflation can be illustrated as follows. If we took a look at the peak CPI of 9.1% in June 2022 and compared it to the 6.5% CPI in December 2022, we see a drop in the rate of 2.6%. If we look at the Biennial rate or what would happen if we calculated CPI at a compound 2-year rate, we come up with 14.99% for the 2-year period ending in June 2022, and 13.96% for the 2-year period ending December 2022. This is only a 1.03% decline. This does not even consider that CPI underestimates the price increases for most necessities, and only saw recent declines because of fuel prices. Price rate increase and actual price increase are two different animals. Prices are still going up. Inflation is never simple inflation but is always compound inflation over an extended period of time.
Christoball
Christoball
1 year ago
Reply to  Christoball
Said another way, even if next months CPI report came in at 0%; prices would still be at least 14% higher than they were 2 years ago. It would take six years for 2% targeted CPI inflation to compound to 12.61% CPI inflation. May be 6.5 years to reach 14%. So it would take an additional 4.5 more years of 0% CPI to match what a targeted 2% CPI would have achieved with December 2020 as the start date.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
1 year ago
Reply to  Christoball
YES, YES, YES. the quarterly payroll published by BLS too is where to look. per larry summers. the gold medal
inflation “keyboard zero electronically conjured currency” was like 25 years worth in 2 years of the wuhan flu world shut downs. so many men so confused by the hucksters. middlebrows always last to figure out they have been had.
Avery
Avery
1 year ago
The guy who wrote Industrial Society And Its Future lived in a plywood shack in the wilderness for some time, so very low cost of food and shelter there. Walden is an oldie but goodie, if its still in the high schools. No gas cooking stoves in either case !
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
1 year ago
Reply to  Avery
Ted could have had a propane/butane camping burner.
We don’t know.
Christoball
Christoball
1 year ago
Reply to  Lisa_Hooker
Ted may have started the tiny house craze with his Unabomber Shack.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
1 year ago
Reply to  Avery
classic read. if you want something really thought provoking. 5 books in one, “link to nyrb.com someone erased from history books. karl marx black son in law wrote this from prison. one of the greatest economic histories ever put to pen. marx hated him.
shamrock
shamrock
1 year ago
I’d like to see your preferred inflation numbers, I think it replaces Rent and OER with Case-shiller. That would probably replace the 0.8% increase in shelter with a 0.8% decrease, which would move the month over month number to -0.3 or -0.4.
One view is CPI shelter lags Case-shiller by 12 months so 2023 would see an overall drop in shelter costs.
Mish
Mish
1 year ago
Reply to  shamrock
I’ll do that on the next Case-Shiller report. It will suggest what I have been saying – the Fed is likely to make an error in the opposite direction.
But we should not be in this setup at all.
hmk
hmk
1 year ago
Reply to  Mish
Completely disagree. The statistics report the most favorable doctored results that will benefit government borrowing costs and decrease entitlement cola. I am sure you are aware that if inflation was calculated the same as in the 70’s it would result in higher numbers and much higher borrowing costs for uncle sam. It like the fox guarding the chicken coop. The interest rate should be set higher than the inflation rate or else you have essentially negative rates. If something breaks because of the govt raising rates so be it. It needs to be reconciled the sooner the better. The fed and the govt has caused one of the greatest economic distortions in history. Its causing the wealth ineqaulity gap and enriching the crony capitalists. This inequality is what casues civil unrest and civil war. Its why communism intially sounds good after the proletariat have been screwed over to long. The one thing I think the fed may be making a mistake in is trying to reduce the balance sheet at the same time. That maybe should stop, but the the hikes, hell no. I just re read your post again and may have misinterpreted it. Are you saying they may make a mistake in lowering to soon, ie as you said in the oppostite direction?

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