Atlanta and Cleveland Have it Right on Inflation

Using our AI engine, we prompted a description of the Atlanta Fed’s Flexible CPI. What we got was a pretty decent explanation:

“The Atlanta Fed Flexible Price Consumer Price Index (CPI) is a measure that is calculated from a subset of goods and services included in the CPI that change price relatively frequently. This index is based on the premise that flexible prices are quick to change and, therefore, when these prices are set, they incorporate less of an expectation about future inflation​.”

So, it doesn’t reflect things like rent or used car prices (the average age of the US auto fleet is the oldest it's ever been at around 12 years old). It does reflect purchases of needs rather than wants—things like groceries, dry cleaning, restaurant or hotel pricing, etc. In a way, it is similar to the popular “Supercore” inflation metric (services ex-housing) in so far as it eliminates the largest infrequent purchase one makes.

In our work, this measure leads the CPI by about eight months, and it is falling at a 3.36% 3-month AR.

Atlanta Fed Flexible

This telegraphs a rapidly falling CPI, except obviously for shelter. But there is good news on this front too. The Zillow Rent Index, which leads the owner’s equivalent rent portion of the CPI, has rolled over. Rents now are growing at roughly half the rate of the OER component of the CPI. As this 8% rate falls toward 4%, this will accelerate the rate at which the CPI declines into the fall.

CPI Owners Rent and Zillow Rent Index