CPI And Retail Sales In September 2017 And Gold

 | Oct 16, 2017 08:25AM ET

On Friday, the reports on U.S. consumer inflation and retail sales were released. What do they imply for the gold market?h3 Retail Sales Spike in September/h3

Last month we U.S. retail sales soared 1.6 percent in September following a 0.3 percent rise in July (after a downward revision from 0.6 percent). The number was strong and above expectations. Actually, it has been the biggest increase since 2015. However, the jump was mainly caused by a rebound in sales of cars and trucks triggered by replacement demand after damages caused by hurricanes Harvey and Irma. When we exclude vehicles, retail sales rose 1 percent in September. It is still an excellent number, but partly caused by higher gas prices. When adjusted for this factor, retail sales rose 0.5 percent. A significantly lower number – but still robust. And the annual growth also accelerated, as one can see in the chart below.

Chart 1: Real retail sales and food services sales (blue line) and retail sales excluding food services (red line) year-over-year from September 2012 to September 2017.

The jump in retail sales was distorted by the landfalls of hurricanes and the following rebound. However, the increase was robust, even when we take into account these effects. Hence, the report signals that the U.S. economy remains in good shape, which is bad news for the gold market.

h3 CPI Also Soars in September/h3

Consumer prices jumped 0.5 percent last month . However, the move was driven mainly by higher gas prices due to disruptions caused by hurricanes Harvey and Irma. The price of gasoline soared 13.1 percent last month. Hence, the core CPI, which excludes food and energy, increased merely 0.1 percent. On an annual basis, the change in core CPI remained at 1.7 percent, while the overall index soared 2.2 percent, exceeding the Fed’s target. Therefore, there was an acceleration in inflationary dynamics, as one can see in the chart below.

Chart 2: CPI (blue line) and core CPI (red line) year-over-year from September 2012 to September 2017.