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By Diccon Hyatt
The sudden drop of inflation in November could clear the decks for the
Federal Reserve to cut interest rates to help boost the faltering job
market. But the outlook is complicated by the government shutdown's
impact on the data.
Core inflation in the Consumer Price Index fell to a four-year low in November,
the Bureau of Labor Statistics said Thursday. Normally that kind of
news would be music to the ears of officials at the Federal Reserve who
adjust the central bank's interest rate with the goal of keeping
inflation low. If the trend is confirmed in future months, the central
bank might cut interest rates without fear of stoking inflation.
However, experts said the good news could prove to be a mirage, since
the government shutdown in October and November may have distorted the
picture. Among other abnormalities, the BLS did not report price data
for October at all, since it couldn't carry out its usual surveys that
month.
Economists have long expected inflation to cool significantly
because home prices have decelerated over the past few years after
surging during the pandemic. That day may have finally arrived, which
could help resolve the debate
among Fed officials about whether to keep the fed funds rate higher for
longer to fight inflation. Alternatively, they could lower it to boost
the economy and encourage hiring to prevent the recent jobs slowdown from turning into a wave of high unemployment.
"A surprisingly sharp decline in U.S. consumer price inflation should
grease the wheels for further Fed easing in 2026," Sal Guatieri, senior
economist at BMO Capital Markets, wrote in a commentary.
Financial markets are pricing in only a 26.6% chance the Fed will cut
interest rates at its next meeting in January, after it cut them by a
quarter-point at each of its last three meetings. Thursday's
surprisingly tame inflation report did little to shift those
expectations. Fed officials may wait for more reliable data before
making any more moves with interest rates, since setting rates too low
risks fueling high inflation.
"The latest CPI numbers are encouraging for the Federal Reserve, but Fed Chair Jerome Powell has already warned against reading too much into the latest data due to distortions from the shutdown," Bernard Yaros, lead economist at Oxford Economics, wrote in a commentary.
READ: The U.S. May Be Gaining 60,000 Fewer Jobs Every Month Than We Thought
Still, the report could help ease some inflation concerns at the Fed,
which has a dual mandate to keep inflation low and employment high. Data
this week showed the job market's recent slowdown deepened in November, which could encourage the Fed to emphasize the labor side of its mandate and make rate cuts more likely.
"The weaker than expected inflation reading for November supports the
case for further Fed cuts in the New Year, particularly given the
deterioration in labour market conditions signaled by data released
earlier this week," Andrew Grantham, senior economist at CIBC, wrote in a
commentary.