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Smith Faculty
Opinion Article |
October 18,
2006 |
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
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Consumer Prices
Fall 0.5 Percent in September
Fed Should Stand Pat and Stock Prices
Should Surge
Today, the Labor Department reported
that the Consumer Price Index fell 0.5
percent in September, after rising 0.2
percent in August. The consensus
forecast was minus 0.3 percent, and my
forecast published by Reuters was minus
0.4 percent.
Seasonally adjusted, food prices were
up 0.4 percent in September, after
rising 0.3 and 0.2 percent in August and
July. Energy prices fell 7.2 percent in
September, after rising 0.3 and 2.9
percent in August and July.
Energy and food prices are quite
erratic from month to month, and Federal
Reserve policymakers pay close attention
to movements in the core index.
The Federal Reserve is particularly
concerned about the pass through of
higher petroleum prices into other
sectors of the economy, and labor market
pressures.
Core consumer prices consumer prices
less food and energy rose 0.2 percent in
September, after rising 0.2 percent in
August and July. The consensus forecast
and my forecast were 0.2 percent.
Since September 2005, core consumer
prices have risen 2.9 percent, and the
compound annual rate of change for the
three months ending in September was
2.7 percent.
Core consumer price inflation remains
above Ben Bernanke's target range of one
to two percent. However, core consumer
price inflation in recent months
reflected the continuing pass through of
prior surges in energy prices to
non-energy products. Those pressures are
now reversing.
Slowing economic growth, moderating
housing prices, and falling oil and
natural gas prices should relieve
pressures on both the broader consumer
price index and core consumer prices.
Inflation should decline the remainder
of this year.
With the housing and automobile
sectors slowing, raising interest rates
further would serve no useful purpose.
The Fed should not change interest rate
policy before its January meeting.
Growth should recover to about 3
percent by the first half of next year.
Home prices are moderating, not
collapsing, and overall these have risen
nearly 50 percent over the last five
years. Falling energy prices are
bolstering consumer confidence, and
consumers still have considerable home
equity to tap. Holiday retail sales will
demonstrate unexpected strength, and
along with more robust commercial
construction and business investment,
will pump new life into to aging
economic expansion.
Falling energy prices, moderating
inflation and healthy holiday sales will
strengthen corporate profits and
investor confidence. The stock market
rally should continue into the New Year.
Household savings performance will
improve, and ordinary investors will
shift from bigger mortgages and homes to
stocks. Conditions are ripe for the long
awaited bull market on Wall Street.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
University of Maryland School of Business
and former Chief Economist at the U.S.
International Trade Commission.
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