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Inflation Ex-Deflation (This Time, INCLUDING Energy)

Here is a twist: We used to discuss how the Fed loved their core (ex food & energy) inflation measures. I termed that Inflation Ex-Inflation, and if you look around TBP, you will see lots of mentions of that measure.

Take a closer look at Energy, one of the biggest non-housing components. As noted this morning, Commodities have entered a Bear Market. Gas & Oil are not contributing much inflationary pressures. If anything, Energy costs now are acting as a drag on Inflation.

Call it Inflation Ex-Deflation (Do you want to guess what that means for the Fed’s love of the Core Inflation (ex food & energy)?

Consider the Federal Reserve inflation target of 2.0%. Jim Bianco notes that inflation is moderate at 1.73%. However, if you take a closer look at the chart below of core CPI — you will see a 2.3% on a year-over-year basis (blue line) and a heady 2.71% on a three-month annualized basis (red line).

Sum it up and it means inflation less energy is largely running above the Federal Reserve’s target.

Energy Now A Drag On Inflation

Click to enlarge:

Source: Bianco Research

 

A Look At Gas Prices


Source: Bianco Research

This post originally appeared at The Big Picture and is posted with permission.

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