“Core PCE held at 2.9% y/y in August, matching forecasts. Sticky inflation and strong spending keep the Fed on hold. Bonds slip as rate cut hopes fade.”, — write: www.fxempire.com
Personal Income and Spending Data Adds to Inflation Concerns Accompanying the inflation print, personal income rose 0.4% in August, slightly beating the forecast of 0.3%. Personal spending also grew by 0.6%, stronger than the 0.5% estimate. The uptick in consumption, particularly in services, supports continued price stickiness and adds weight to the Fed’s cautious stance.
Spending strength combined with stubborn core inflation suggests demand is still resilient enough to keep disinflation progress slow, especially in labor-intensive sectors. With real disposable income rising only 0.1%, households appear to be spending more aggressively than income growth might support.
Sticky Services Inflation Limits Fed’s Policy Flexibility While goods prices have softened, service-sector inflation continues to keep the core index elevated. This reflects broad wage growth and strong demand for healthcare, housing, and financial services. The Fed remains focused on this core metric as a signal for when it might consider easing policy, and Friday’s data offers little justification for a near-term pivot.
Markets are now pricing in a more extended pause, with traders pushing expectations for the first rate cut further out as inflation proves slower to retreat than hoped.
Outlook: Bearish for Bonds, Mixed for USD, Supportive for Equities With core inflation stuck at 2.9% and spending remaining strong, the Fed is likely to maintain its restrictive stance. This is bearish for Treasuries, particularly on the front end, as yield compression expectations ease. The US dollar reaction may be muted given the in-line data, but equities could find modest support from ongoing consumer resilience and the absence of hawkish surprises.