3 Numbers: Soft U.S. Inflation Won't Help Interest Rate Hawks

 | Dec 15, 2015 01:55AM ET

US economic data is the main event for today’s macro numbers as the crowd’s attention focuses ever more closely on tomorrow’s policy announcement from the Federal Reserve. Three reports will provide more insight for deciding if a rate hike is likely: consumer inflation, the New York Fed’s regional manufacturing survey, and the monthly update on sentiment for the home building industry via the National Association of Home Builders.

US: Consumer Price Index (1330 GMT): Consumer inflation ticked higher in October after two straight months of decline. The mildly positive reading for pricing pressure inspired some economists to consider the possibility that inflation is firming, and thereby offering support for the Federal Reserve to start raising interest rates at tomorrow’s monetary policy meeting.

Today’s report on the consumer price index for November, however, is not expected to be all that helpful for policy hawks. The year-over-year trends for headline and core CPI haven’t changed much recently, although if you look closely you’ll see a slight upward bias in the annual pace of inflation after stripping out energy and food. But that's a thin reed for arguing that monetary policy should be tightened before the year is out.

In fact, the numbers du jour are projected to show fresh weakness for last month’s profile. Econoday.com’s consensus forecast sees no change for headline CPI’s monthly comparison, down from October’s 0.2% rise. Meanwhile, core CPI — considered a more reliable measure of the trend — is expected to rise 0.2% for November in monthly terms, matching the previous gain.

In other words, no big changes are expected for today’s inflation update relative to the previous release. Soft inflation persists. The Fed's 2% inflation goal is a near-term possibility based on core CPI's 1.9% annual rise, although headline CPI's year-over-year pace is close to zero. Using this data as a guide, there’s still a weak case for a Fed rate hike and it's unlikely that the November release will offer a different view.