Ahead of the Federal Reserve's big two-day policy meeting next week, a key index of consumer prices released today showed inflation continuing to ease.
The Commerce Department's Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price Index rose 0.1% last month and was up 5% from a year ago, slowing from 5.5% in November. Excluding more volatile food and energy prices, the "core" rate edged 0.3% higher in December and was 4.4% higher than the year before, decelerating from November's 4.7%. Both the rise in the overall index and core rate were roughly in line with economist estimates.
The PCE Price Index is the Federal Reserve's preferred gauge of inflation because it tracks consumer decisions more accurately than the Consumer Price Index (CPI). That's because the "basket of goods" that is tracked in the PCE Price Index is updated more frequently than for CPI, which uses a fixed basket of goods and services.
Next week, the Fed will kick off its first policy meeting for 2023 and these figures could push the central bank to make more moderate decisions in its inflation-fighting measures. Fed funds futures data tracked by CME Group shows that traders overwhelmingly expect the Fed to raise interest rates by 25 basis points.
Stocks are on the rise after the inflation report, as investors grow more optimistic about inflation easing and potentially more moderate action by the Fed.
- Kara
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