Following the release of the PCE Index figures, which the Federal Reserve prefers as its key inflation metric, the data indicates a slight increase in inflation for the third quarter. Nonetheless, market sentiment remains unchanged, and the prediction that the Federal Reserve is on track to implement rate cuts this year holds firm. Saddled along with the PCE Index, we also have the Personal Income & Spending reports which have indicated the economy is still expanding, and the GDP estimates have also corroborated the reports with their own solid pre-release numbers.
PCE Index
Prices in the U.S. rose slightly in June in another confirmation that inflation has slowed again, keeping the Federal Reserve on track to cut high U.S. interest rates in the next few months. The Fed’s preferred PCE index edged up 0.1% last month, the government said Friday. That matched the forecast of economists polled by The Wall Street Journal.
Consumer Spending
Consumer spending rose a mild 0.3% in June to help keep the U.S. economy expanding at an above-average speed. Households spent more on travel, recreational goods, medicine, and utilities amid a summer heat wave, government data showed.
GDP (Pre-release)
So much for the U.S. economy shedding most of its surprising strength from last year. Gross domestic product, the official scorecard of the economy, expanded at an above-average 2.8% annual pace in the second quarter, the government said Thursday. Economists polled by The Wall Street Journal had forecast a 2.1% increase. GDP grew twice as fast as it did in the first quarter when the economy expanded at a 1.4% rate.
Primary Mortgage Market Survey Index
- 15-Yr FRM rates are seeing an increase by 0.02% with the current rate at 6.07%
- 30-Yr FRM rates are seeing an increase by 0.01% with the current rate at 6.78%
MND Rate Index
- 30-Yr FHA rates saw no change for this week. Current rates at 6.32%
- 30-Yr VA rates saw no change for this week. Current rates at 6.34%
Jobless Claims
Initial Claims were reported to be 235,000 compared to the expected claims of 235,000. The prior week landed at 245,000.
What’s Ahead
All eyes are on the FOMC rate decision this upcoming week. The only notable release for this week outside of the rate decision meeting is the Non-farm Payroll numbers, which are a greater figure for the state of consumer spending power, and whether income is keeping pace with inflation.