What Does the Latest U.S. Inflation Report Reveal?

Executive summary:

  • The August consumer price index report showed that U.S. inflation slowed to 2.5%
  • Polling markets suggest that the race for the White House remains extremely tight
  • Exports surged in China while inflation stayed soft

On the latest edition of Market Week in Review, Director and Senior Investment Strategist Alex Cousley and Senior Internal Communications Analyst McKenna Painter discussed the August U.S. inflation report and its potential market implications. They also chatted about the upcoming U.S. presidential election and unpacked the latest trade and inflation numbers from China.

U.S. inflation continues to ease

Painter and Cousley began with a look at the U.S. consumer price index (CPI) report for August, which showed headline inflation slowing to 2.5% on an annual basis. This was the lowest inflation reading in over three years and represented a further easing from July’s reading of 2.9%, Cousley said.

However, he noted that core inflation—which excludes the volatile food and energy sectors—came in slightly higher than consensus expectations, increasing 0.3% from July to August. Regardless, Cousley said he doesn’t expect the core inflation numbers to impact the U.S. Federal Reserve’s (Fed) upcoming decision on interest rates.