Wholesale Prices Increase at Slower Pace in July

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T.J. Kirkpatrick/Bloomberg News

Wholesale prices in theĢżUnited StatesĢżclimbed at a slower pace in July, a harbinger of things to come as energy prices plunge.

The 0.2% increase in the producer-price index followed a 0.4% gain in June, Labor Department figures showed Aug. 14. The median forecast of 70 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News called for a 0.1% advance. Costs dropped 0.8% over the past 12 months.

A firming in inflation may be on its last legs as oil prices drop this month, driven by a global supply glut that’s expected to last through 2016. Federal Reserve officials have said such slumps are transitory as they look for signs that inflation will move toward their 2% target in order to raise interest rates.

ā€œThis last gain is likely to precede declines in August and probably September as well if this weakening trend in oil prices continues,ā€ Mike Englund, chief economist at Action Economics in Boulder, Colorado, said before the report. Still, ā€œwe’re sort of in a sweet spot for the Fed as we would see itĢżā€” in general, there’s not much risk of deflation, and with the drop we’re seeing in commodity prices, there’s not much risk of inflation, either.ā€



Projections for total producer prices in the Bloomberg survey ranged from a drop of 1% to a 0.3% gain.

Energy expenses declined 0.6% in July after climbing 2.4% the month before. Food prices decreased 0.1% after a 0.6% gain.

Wholesale prices excluding these two components rose 0.3% for a second month compared with the 0.1% gain seen by the median forecast of economists surveyed. Those costs were up 0.6% from July 2014.

The increase last month in the index excluding food and fuel was paced by a 0.4% advance in the cost of services. About 40% of that gain was traced to a 9.9% surge in hotel-room rates, the biggest in data dating to 2009.

Eliminating food, fuel and trade services to arrive at a reading that some economists prefer because it excludes one of the report’s most volatile components, wholesale costs climbed 0.2% in July after rising 0.3% the month before.

As part of their dual mandate, Fed policymakers are keeping a close watch on inflation trends. The personal consumption expenditures index, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, rose 0.3% in June from a year earlier and has been below the Fed’s 2% goal since May 2012.

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