PPI surges 11.3% year-over-year, far worse than analysts expected

The PPI rose .04% for the month, surging upwards by 11.3% year over year, according to the PPI for June, the most recent data available. Economists had forecast the rise would be 0.8% monthly, and only 10.7% annually. Measured by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), this data is one of the metrics the market looks to in determining the overall market’s health.

The PPI is the producer price index, which measures the average changes in prices domestic producers’ products being output – it’s the cost of goods before they reach consumers – this wholesale inflation data is a leading indicator used to forecast upcoming months.

On the heels of the shocking CPI (consumer price index) which surged to 9.1% yesterday to yet another new 40-year high in inflation.

In anticipation of a spike in the PPI, combined with President Biden’s visit overseas today, the DOW Futures (pre-market trading) was down over 400 points at the time of the release of the new PPI numbers.

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Analysts now firmly expect that the Federal Reserve (the Fed) will implement a full point rate hike in coming weeks to fight inflation – quantitative tightening is a standard reaction to too many dollars chasing too few goods.

The final data points this week in taking the pulse of the economy are jobs and energy numbers tomorrow, but with even worse than expected CPI and PPI reports, there is not much optimism among analysts that any of this week’s data will point anywhere but recession territory.

There is now a growing debate regarding whether or not we are in a recession, what the method is for recovery, and what policies should be implemented to end the surge in inflation. The contentious question this week is – have we peaked? It still doesn’t appear that a true consensus is upon us.

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