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Smith Faculty
Opinion Article |
November 17,
2006 |
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
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Consumer Prices
Fall 0.5 Percent in October
Core Inflation Slows, Fed Should Stand
Pat and Stock Prices Should Surge
Today, the Labor Department reported
that the Consumer Price Index fell 0.5
percent in October, after falling 0.5
percent in September.
Seasonally adjusted, food prices were
up 0.3 percent in October, after rising
0.3 and 0.4 percent in September and
August. Energy prices fell 7.0 percent
in October, after falling 7.2 percent in
September and rising 0.3 percent in
August. Also, transportation and apparel
prices fell 3.1 and 0.7 percent,
respectively.
The Federal Reserve has been
particularly concerned about the pass
through into other sectors of higher
petroleum prices, which surged from
March through August, and pressures from
labor market pressures. Federal Reserve
policymakers pay close attention to
movements in the core consumer price
index, which strips away direct energy
costs and food prices.
Core consumer prices rose 0.1 percent
in October, after rising 0.2 percent in
July, August and September. Since
October 2005, core consumer prices have
risen 2.7 percent, and the compound
annual rate of change for the three
months ending in October was 2.3
percent.
Now the outlook is for core inflation
to fall within Ben Bernanke's target
range of one to two percent. The Federal
Reserve should not change interest rate
policy before its March meeting, and
economic growth should recover to
between 2.5 and 3 percent by the first
half of next year.
Holiday shopping should give
retailers a boost, and along with more
robust commercial construction and
business investment, sustain the
economic expansion.
All of this is great news for the
stock market.
Falling energy prices, moderating
inflation and decent holiday sales will
strengthen corporate profits and
investor confidence.
If the new Democratic majority in
Congress does not spook the bond and
equity markets with talk of broad
spending initiatives, new taxes, or
overly aggressive business regulations,
the stock market rally should continue
into the New Year.
Household savings performance will
improve, and ordinary investors should
shift from buying bigger homes to
investing in stocks. Stock prices should
surge.
The biggest surprise of 2007 will be
the resilient bull market.
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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