|
Smith Faculty
Opinion Article |
December 19,
2006 |
|
By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
E-MAIL
WEB SITE |
 |
Producer Prices Rise 2.0 Percent in
November
No Change in Fed Policy Likely, Stock
Prices Should Continue Rising
Today, the Labor Department reported
the Producer Price Index rose 2.0
percent in November, after falling 1.6
percent in October.
In November, food prices rose 0.1
percent and energy prices rose 6.1
percent; however, the previous month,
food and energy prices fell 0.8 percent
and 5.0 percent, respectively
Core producer prices producer prices
less food and energy rose 1.3 percent in
November, after falling 0.9 percent in
October.
Even when food and energy prices are
removed from the index, producer prices
are much more volatile than consumer
prices. The November increases in
producer prices should not be viewed
with alarm, because of past monthly
declines. Over the last year, producer
prices, including food and energy, have
risen only 0.9 percent, and consumer
price inflation is likely to moderate
through the early months of 2007.
The Federal Reserve will want to see
several more months of data before
changing interest rate policy, and no
change is likely at least until the
March 27-28 meeting of the Open Market
Committee. My quarterly forecast does
not build in an interest rate change
until the May 10 meeting.
Growth should moderate to about 2.1
percent in the fourth quarter and
rebound to near 2.5 percent the first
half of next year.
Some consumer optimism will be needed
to power this recovery, as the fall in
housing starts is likely to weigh down
growth through the second quarter.
Prices for new and existing homes
have moderated, not collapsed, and
overall these have risen about 55
percent over the last five years. Recent
adjustments in existing and new home
prices should be viewed as healthy,
reining in speculations in land values.
Once completed, these adjustments should
help establish the framework for price
stability, and healthier growth less
dependent on property speculation and
borrowing.
Gasoline prices are rebounding a bit
in December but are not climbing to the
menacing levels seen last summer.
Overall, more moderate energy prices are
cushioning the effects of the modest
adjustment in home prices on consumers,
and homeowners still have considerable
untapped equity.
Falling energy prices, moderating
inflation and decent holiday sales will
further strengthen corporate profits and
investor confidence. If the new
Democratic majority in Congress does not
spook the bond and equity markets with
talk of aggressive new spending
initiatives, taxes, or business
regulations, the stock market rally will
remain robust into the New Year.
Household savings performance will
improve, and ordinary investors should
shift from buying bigger homes to buying
stocks. Also, a lower dollar against the
euro and other currencies is sparking
interest in U.S. equities.
Moderate inflation, stronger company
fundamentals, and stronger demand from
ordinary investors and from abroad
should push stocks higher in 2007.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
University of Maryland School of Business
and former Chief Economist at the U.S.
International Trade Commission.
|