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The Fed’s preferred inflation measure set a new 40-year high in June


The Personal Consumption Expenditures price index, which measures the change in the prices of goods and services purchased by consumers, rose by 6.8% in June as compared to the same period last year, according to data released Friday by the Bureau of Economic Analysis.

That surpasses the previous 40-year high of 6.6% in March of this year and falls just shy of the 6.9% year-over-year rate notched in January 1982, when inflation was decelerating from one of its highest levels in US history.

Prior to June, the PCE index held steady at 6.3% for both May and April. However, June saw gas prices hit record levels, and the PCE price index reflected those gains: Food prices increased 11.2% and energy prices grew 43.5%, according to the BEA. Month over month, the PCE price index rose 1% from May.

Stripping out the volatile food and energy prices, core PCE — the inflation index closely watched by the Federal Reserve — increased by 4.8% from one year ago, up slightly from May but down from a high of 5.3% in February.

Soaring energy prices helped push the Consumer Price Index, another primary gauge of inflation, to a near 41-year high in June, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics released earlier this month.

Incomes taking a hit

Friday’s BEA data showed that Americans’ incomes grew by 0.6% month over month, disposable income grew by 0.7% and spending jumped by 1.1%. However, when taking inflation into account, consumer spending ticked up only 0.1% and disposable incomes fell by 0.3% month over month.

Consumer spending is slowing, mostly due to inflation, said Scott Brave, lead consumer spending economist at Morning Consult.

“Inflation-adjusted disposable personal incomes fell again in June, and it’s really been trending down consistently for well over a year now,” Brave told CNN Business in an interview. “And that just puts pressure, it puts a strain on the consumer to react, and I think we’re reaching that point now where growth is certainly slowing.”

Lower-income households got hit first, and they got hit the hardest, he said.

“More recently, we started to see that filter into middle-income households as well,” he said. “They are also starting to pull back more on spending and having to adjust their allocations of spending.”

Consumers still have a dour outlook

Understandably, consumers aren’t feeling great about the state of the economy right now, especially the high inflation.

An index of consumer sentiment during July measured 51.5, according to a final reading of data from the University of Michigan’s Surveys of Consumers. That’s up slightly from July’s preliminary figure of 51.1 and settles in above the all-time low of 50 that was set in June.

“Robust consumer spending had been supported by strong labor markets and the expectation of growing incomes; but with persistently high prices eroding those incomes, consumers are adjusting their spending habits to cope,” Surveys of Consumers Director Joanne Hsu said in a statement. “With emerging…



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