Here’s Why The CPI Report Will Dictate The Market Bottom

 | Sep 12, 2022 02:05AM ET

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) is the inflation gauge. Inflation is the rate at which prices are rising and, in turn, eroding your buying power. It’s released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) on a monthly basis. It measures the average rate of change in prices consumers pay for a basket of products and services compared to the year-ago period.

The core CPI report doesn’t include food and energy. That’s separate. The report contains pricing data by industries and locations to derive a general overall CPI figure. The report is released monthly for the prior month’s data (IE: August CPI data is reported in September).

The CPI reached a 40-year high of 9.1% in June 2022, indicating a possible inflation peak. Incidentally, the S&P 500 (NYSE:SPY) hit a low of $362.17 the same month. Coincidence? Maybe Not.

h2 What Does CPI Measure?/h2

The CPI is generally a measure of the cost of living for an average person. It includes pricing trends for thousands of items through nearly 23,000 retail and service businesses and 43,000 rental housing units throughout 75 urban areas.

It collects approximately 90,000 prices in eight categories: housing, apparel, transportation, education and communication, recreation, medical care, food and beverages, and goods and services. There is overall CPI and core CPI.

h2 Core CPI /h2

The financial markets pay the most attention to the core CPI, which excludes food (14% of overall CPI) and energy prices (7.5%) due to their volatility skewing the results. The core CPI is used to measure the core inflation, which also excludes food and energy prices.

Core CPI is like adjusted earnings, as many critics argue that food and energy prices impact households the hardest. For example, the December 2021 core CPI was 7%, excluding energy and food. However, energy and food hit consumer wallets hard.

Within the energy category, gasoline prices rose 50.8%. Within the food category, beef roasts rose 22.1%. The information is all included in the BLS overall CPI data, also called CPI-U. It just requires a little digging.

The Federal Reserve also references core CPI or core inflation in policy announcements and is widely considered the benchmark to gauge the inflation trend. It’s also used as a cost of living indicator to adjust the wages for workers, Social Security, and Medicare payments. It can be used to gauge the recessions during periods of monetary tightening and expansion.