The July headline and core inflation numbers were higher than expected. However, lower energy prices, if sustained, should begin to help cool inflation fears. In addition, core inflation will turn lower because the economy remains weak and companies are failing to pass through higher input costs.
We have highlighted several times before that core CPI is likely at a cyclical peak: inflation lags economic growth by several quarters and the economy continues to slow. We still assign a very low probability to rising inflation on a cyclical basis, because wage costs failed to rise during the economic boom and are already rolling over substantially. In addition, the gap between headline and core inflation is likely to close dramatically, via a sharp decline in the headline rate as both energy and food inflation cool. Bottom line: Hawkish Fed rhetoric is unlikely to translate into a change in policy rates for a long time because inflation fears should gradually recede. Further economic weakness remains the more immediate threat.