Good June CPI Print Raises Bets for Rate Cuts

Chief Economist Eugenio J. Alemán discusses current economic conditions.

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) was much better than expected in June, printing the first deflationary month for the index since July 2022 when it was -0.01%. June’s CPI was down by 0.1%, which took the year-over-year rate to 3.0% – the lowest year-over-year rate since March of 2021 (check the indicator section of this weekly for a more comprehensive view on June’s CPI numbers).

We want to repeat what we have said in the past: “One data point doesn’t a trend make.” However, the June data, after weaker than expected readings for April and May, confirm our suspicion that inflation numbers during the first quarter of the year were a fluke. As we have also said before, an institution as important as the Federal Reserve (Fed) cannot base its policy on something that may be an outlier. Now, June’s print confirms that what happened during the first quarter of the year was just that.

YoY Growth Rates in Headline and Core CPI

This was why we were very surprised when the Fed changed its view on the path for interest rates during the June FOMC meeting. If inflation has been coming down consistently with an economy growing above potential, it meant (against many pundits arguing otherwise) that above-potential economic growth was not a threat to a disinflationary path. Thus, using “a strong economy” argument to keep interest rates higher for longer made, in layman’s terms, no sense!

Now, because we believe the economy has slowed down and is probably growing at potential or maybe just below potential, the path for inflation will continue to improve. Our concern is that monetary policy is a very blunt instrument and the Fed risks slowing down the economy too much.