Just like every headline economic statistic of late, the Finished-Goods All-Items
PPI increased a greater-than-expected 0.9% in May after a 0.7% rise in April.
As the table below shows, another sharp rise in energy prices dominated the
increase in finished-goods prices. After six consecutive monthly increases,
finished-food prices declined marginally.

As the Chart 1 below vividly illustrates, producer-price inflation has accelerated
at the intermediate-goods and finished-goods levels. But Chart 2 shows that
food-and-energy-price induced increases in producer prices are not passing
through to a large extent so far to the prices of finished producer
goods excluding food and energy. In the three months ended May, the "core" Finished-Goods
PPI is up at an annualized rate of only 0.75% -- the lowest since September
2006. But Chart 2 does show that core intermediate-goods producer price increases
have re-accelerated. There appears to be about a four-month lag between core
intermediate-goods inflation and core finished-goods inflation. So, the re-acceleration
in core intermediate-goods inflation could lead to a re-acceleration in core
finished-goods inflation a few months down the road. That said, the correlation
between the two when core intermediate-goods inflation is advanced by four
months is only 0.27, suggesting a relatively weak relationship. For the record,
there seems to be little relationship between core intermediate-goods producer inflation
and core consumer-goods inflation, contemporaneously or leading. Moreover,
core consumer-goods wholesale inflation does not show any leading characteristics
with regard to core consumer-goods retail inflation.
Chart 1

Chart 2

ess the bottom line of all this is that unless the Fed is more worried about
producer inflation than consumer inflation, the May PPI data are not terribly
relevant to FOMC policy decisions, with one exception. The medical care
component of the PPI increased only 0.1% in May after a 0.2% increase in April.
Medical care has a relatively high weight in the Personal Consumption Expenditures
(PCE) price index, the presumed Fed-preferred measure of consumer inflation.
Therefore, the May core PCE price index would be expected to again show only
a relatively small increase as far a medical care costs are concerned.
Upside Surprise on May CPI Could Imply Downside Surprise to
Real Retail Sales
If the headline May CPI increase should follow in the footsteps of the May
PPI higher-than-expected increase, then there might be a downside surprise
to May retail sales. Taking out bar and restaurant sales from total retail
sales and deflating that by the PPI for consumer goods, we find that this measure
of "real" retail sales increased by only 0.3% in May compared to the 1.5% increase
(again, excluding sales of food services) in reported nominal retail sales.
On a three-month basis, this measure of real retail sales has contracted 1.1%.
See Chart 3 below for the pictorial of all this. But we will have to wait until
Friday morning for the CPI report to more accurately gauge the improvement
in price-adjusted retail sales.
On the Verge of an Historic First?
On Tuesday, the yield on the Fed's constant-maturity 10-year Treasury
security closed at 5.26%, which also was the level of the effective federal
funds rate. The reason I mention this is that we may be only one stronger-than-expected
economic release away from the yield on the 10-year Treasury security going
above the effective federal funds rate. If this positive spread between the
Treasury 10-year and the fed funds rate were to be maintained on a monthly
average basis, it would be the first time in the history of this series,
which dates back to August 1954, that we have gone from a negative spread back
to a positive spread without the federal funds rate falling (see Chart
3). Perhaps we do live in a new era?
Chart 3

Unemployment Claimants Higher Than Year-Ago
Looking at unemployment claims on an unadjusted basis, new claims have for
the past two weeks once again moved above year-ago levels. Continuing claims
persistently have been above year-ago levels since mid February. See Chart
4 for the behavior of claims in 2007. The fact that both new and continuing
unemployment insurance claims are above year-ago levels is evidence of a weakening
demand for labor. These claims data are about as pure as the driven snow -
no seasonal adjustments, no sample, but a universe and no business "birth/death" adjustments.
Chart 4
