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July 2006 Consumer prices pressured higher Inflation
accelerated in July; industrial output edges up The
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
- A new surge in energy prices pushed inflation higher in July,
but other prices were more restrained, raising hopes on Wall Street that
interest rates won’t be rising further. The
Consumer Price Index jumped 0.4 percent last month, double the June
increase, the Labor Department reported Wednesday. But outside of
energy and food, prices rose by just 0.2 percent, the smallest gain in
five months. That
represented a second dose of good inflation news, following a report
Tuesday that wholesale prices were up just 0.1 percent in July and,
excluding food and energy, actually fell by 0.3 percent. Two
other reports Wednesday added to the view that a slowing economy could
help to hold inflation in check. Building
permits, considered a good barometer of future activity, dropped by a
sizable 6.5 percent, a further sign that the five-year housing boom is
now over. Wall
Street saw the combination of lower core inflation and a slowing economy
as a sign that the Federal Reserve will not raise rates for an 18th time
when the Fed meets again on Sept. 20. “The
economy, while cooling off, is not cooling off quickly enough to lower
inflation pressures and satisfy the Fed,” said David Wyss, chief
economist at Standard & Poor’s in New York, who predicted one more
Fed rate hike. Richard
Fisher, president of the Dallas Federal Reserve bank, said Wednesday
that the Fed’s next move remains an open question. The
Fed last week left a key interest rate unchanged, breaking a two-year
string of uninterrupted rate hikes and raising hopes among investors
that the central bank is about to end its credit tightening. But
energy prices continued rising, jumping by 2.9 percent in July, led by a
5.3 percent increase in gasoline prices. So
far this year, energy prices have risen at an annual rate of 25.3
percent, helping to boost overall inflation to an annual rate of 4.8
percent, compared with a 3.4 percent rise for consumer prices for all of
2005. Food
costs slowed to a 0.2 percent increase last month, reflecting declines
in the cost of beef, poultry and vegetables. Outside of food and energy,
new car prices edged up just 0.1 percent, reflecting a new round of
discounting by automakers trying to clear unsold cars, while airline
fares jumped by 1.3 percent as airlines sought to pass on higher fuel
costs. American
workers fell further behind to rising prices as average weekly wages,
after adjusting for inflation, fell 0.1 percent, the fourth decline in
the past seven months. |
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