U.S. consumer price growth cools, smallest gain in seven months #SootinClaimon.Com

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https://www.nationthailand.com/business/40006151

U.S. consumer price growth cools, smallest gain in seven months


Prices paid by U.S. consumers rose in August by less than forecast, snapping a string of hefty gains and suggesting that some of the upward pressure on inflation is beginning to wane.

The consumer price index increased 0.3% from July, the smallest advance in seven months, according to Labor Department data released Tuesday. Compared with a year ago, the CPI rose 5.3%.

Excluding the volatile food and energy components, so-called core inflation climbed 0.1% from the prior month, the smallest gain since February and a reflection of declines in the prices of used cars, airfares and auto insurance.

Economists in a Bloomberg survey called for a 0.4% increase in the overall CPI from the prior month and a 5.3% gain from a year earlier, based on the median estimates. Ten-year yields were down to 1.28% and the dollar fell, while U.S. stocks were mostly lower.

Faced with mounting cost pressures as a result of materials shortages, transportation bottlenecks and hiring difficulties, businesses have been boosting prices for consumer goods and services.

While price spikes associated with the economy’s reopening are beginning to abate, tenuous supply chains could linger well into 2022 and keep inflation elevated. Economists at Citigroup Inc. said after the report that they “continue to see signals both in the details of the inflation report and in other data that broader inflationary pressure will prove more persistent than expected.”

A Federal Reserve Bank of New York survey showed Monday that consumers expect inflation at 4% over the next three years, the highest in data back to mid-2013. The CPI report also showed the hot housing market is starting to filter through to rent prices, which rose by the most since March 2020.

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The price data precede next week’s Federal Open Market Committee meeting, where Fed officials will debate how and when to begin tapering asset purchases. Fed Chair Jerome Powell said last month that the central bank could begin reducing its monthly bond purchases this year, but didn’t give a specific time line.

“The ‘is it transitory debate’ is far from over but at least, this more moderate gain in consumer prices will give the Fed some breathing room next week,” said Jennifer Lee, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets. “But not for long.”

The figures offer some validation of views among Fed officials and the Biden administration that high inflation will prove temporary. The report could also help blunt criticism from Republicans that President Joe Biden’s economic stimulus is spurring damaging inflation as he seeks to sell a $3.5 trillion long-term tax-and-spending package that’s also running into opposition from moderate Democrats.

Parts shortages that have driven up input costs are restraining production. In the last week, Toyota and 3M both downgraded their outlooks for car output due to semiconductor shortages, while Nestle said it is introducing even bigger price hikes as commodity and transportation costs surge.

Meantime, Hurricane Ida halted operations at refineries and petrochemical plants in the south, adding to pandemic-related supply chain bottlenecks and likely price pressures as well.

The CPI report showed prices for airfares dropped 9.1% in August, used cars were down 1.5% and vehicle insurance costs decreased 2.8%.

The costs of hotel stays and car rentals also fell, a sign that softening demand as a result of the more contagious delta variant is leading to a deceleration in prices in high-contact sectors most impacted by the pandemic.

“We expect modest core CPI prints over the next few months, as used car prices — the single biggest driver of the spring surge — continue to fall but airline fares and hotel room rates eventually will rebound as the delta wave fades,” Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said in a note.

Rents and owners’ equivalent rent both climbed 0.3%. Among other notable increases, prices of household furnishings jumped by a record 1.2% from July. Costs of motor vehicle parts and equipment, as well as men’s suits, posted unprecedented advances.

While firms have been increasing wages in recent months, rising consumer prices are eroding Americans’ buying power. Inflation-adjusted average hourly earnings fell 0.9% year-over-year in August after a 1.2% drop a month earlier, separate data showed Tuesday.

Published : September 15, 2021

U.S. poverty rate rose from 60-year low, incomes fell amid virus #SootinClaimon.Com

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U.S. poverty rate rose from 60-year low, incomes fell amid virus


U.S. household income fell in 2020 while the national poverty rate rose from a 60-year low as the Covid-19 pandemic upended the U.S. economy and threw millions out of work.

Median, inflation-adjusted household income decreased 2.9% last year to $67,521 according to annual data released Tuesday by the U.S. Census Bureau. The poverty rate rose one percentage point to 11.4% after having dropped for five straight years and reaching the lowest since 1959 in 2019.

The data help flesh out the picture of American families’ economic health in 2020 amid a pandemic that caused the first annual economic contraction since 2009, put tens of millions out of work and exacerbated existing inequalities.

Lower-wage service-industry workers and people of color bore the brunt of job losses. The government’s stimulus checks and extra $600 a week in jobless benefits helped soften the blow, supporting incomes and spending amid widespread unemployment.

The Supplemental Poverty Measure, which includes many government-assistance programs, declined 2.6 percentage points to 9.1% in 2020, the lowest since the gauge started in 2009. This rate is lower than the official poverty rate because of economic-relief payments related to the pandemic, which moved 11.7 million people out of poverty in the first two rounds of disbursements. Five million people were added to poverty due to medical expenses.

There were 37.2 million people living in poverty in 2020, 3.3 million more than a year earlier, the Census Bureau said. It considers a two-parent, two-child household with less than $26,246 in income to be living in poverty; the measure differs by size of household.

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The data show that the official poverty measure is outdated and “can’t be used to examine public policy,” said David Johnson, a research professor at the Institute for Social Research and Ford School of Public Policy at the University of Michigan.

Digging deeper:

– Poverty rates rose among Hispanics and non-Hispanic Whites. While the poverty rate among Black people was the highest at 19.5% and the Asian rate also increased, both weren’t statistically significant changes from 2019.

– Close to one in four people without a high-school diploma were in poverty compared with less than 4% of people with a bachelor’s degree or higher.

– Women are still more likely to live in poverty at rates of 12.6% compared with 10.2% for men. The female-to-male earnings ratio was 0.83, not statistically different from the 2019 ratio.

– For families with single female heads of household, 23.4% were in poverty compared to 11.4% for families led by single males. Married couples saw the lowest poverty rates at 4.7%, up slightly from a year ago.

– Median incomes for non-Hispanic White, Asian, and Hispanic households all decreased in 2020, while changes for Black households were not statistically different. Real median incomes fell in every region of the country other than the Northeast. Every household income group saw income fall in 2020 except for the top 5% of households.

– Tuesday’s report also shows the share of Americans without health insurance at 8.6% last year, amounting to 28 million people. For people with health insurance coverage, 66.5% are on private insurance and 34.8% are on public plans.

Published : September 15, 2021

Treasurys rally after CPI seen pushing off taper #SootinClaimon.Com

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https://www.nationthailand.com/business/40006147

Treasurys rally after CPI seen pushing off taper


Treasurys rallied and U.S. stocks declined after a less-than-forecast increase in inflation was seen as giving Federal Reserve officials more flexibility when it comes to pulling back on stimulus. The dollar fluctuated.

Yields on benchmark 10-year notes fell 5 basis points to 1.26%, narrowing the yield gap between short- and longer-maturity U.S. debt. The financial, industrial and energy sectors led the S&P 500 lower even after the Labor Department reported that the consumer price index increased 0.3% from July. Economists called for a 0.4% gain. The Dow Jones industrial average was weighed down by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Caterpillar Inc.

“It appears that the continued rally in Treasuries is due to speculation that some people have that the CPI data pushes off the Fed” tapering, said Blake Gwinn, strategist at RBC Capital Markets. Gwinn said he doesn’t agree with that view, and continues to see the Fed’s announced the start of its reduction in asset purchases in November or December.

The CPI figures offer some validation of views among Fed officials and the Biden administration that high inflation will prove temporary. The report could also help blunt criticism from Republicans that President Joe Biden’s economic stimulus is spurring damaging inflation as he seeks to sell a $3.5 trillion long-term tax-and-spending package that’s also running into opposition from moderate Democrats.

The focus was firmly on price pressures, with a gauge of commodities around a decade-high. The global stock-market rally is facing head winds amid concerns about the delta virus strain and risks from elevated inflation, which is being stoked by covid-19 related supply disruptions.

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“Today’s sell-off in equities is simply a continuation of the weakness we saw last week,” said Adam Phillips, managing director of portfolio strategy at EP Wealth Advisors. “Although the August CPI report all but guarantees no taper announcement at next week’s FOMC meeting, the clear and present danger is around a slowing economy.”

Elsewhere, Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average closed at the highest level since 1990. Hong Kong and China wavered as traders evaluated the troubles of indebted developer China Evergrande Group, Beijing’s regulatory curbs and a virus flare-up.

Some of the main moves in markets:

Stocks

– The S&P 500 fell 0.6% as of 4:02 p.m. EDT

– The Nasdaq 100 fell 0.3%

– The Dow Jones industrial average fell 0.8%

– The MSCI World index fell 0.4%

Currencies

– The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed

– The euro was little changed at $1.1804

– The British pound fell 0.2% to $1.3806

– The Japanese yen rose 0.3% to 109.67 per dollar

Bonds

– The yield on 10-year Treasurys declined five basis points to 1.27%

– Germany’s 10-year yield declined one basis point to -0.34%

– Britain’s 10-year yield was little changed at 0.74%

Commodities

– West Texas Intermediate crude was little changed

– Gold futures rose 0.7% to $1,807.20 an ounce

Published : September 15, 2021

SET Index falls 0.61% as foreign inflows waver #SootinClaimon.Com

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https://www.nationthailand.com/business/40006130

SET Index falls 0.61% as foreign inflows waver


The Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET) Index closed at 1,623.84 on Tuesday, down 9.92 points or 0.61 per cent. Transactions totalled THB84.17 billion with an index high of 1,640.40 and a low of 1,621.96.

In the morning session, Krungsri Securities forecast the index on Tuesday would fluctuate between 1,625 and 1,645 points amid positive sentiment from neighbouring stock markets and the oil price, plus a decline in domestic Covid-19 infections.

However, it predicted the index would face downward pressure from volatile foreign fund flows amid hints the US Federal Reserve will taper quantitative easing sooner than expected.

The 10 stocks with the highest trade value today were DELTA, PTT, INTUCH, KBANK, AOT, PTTEP, ADVANC, CPALL, EE and PTTGC.

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Other Asian indices were mixed:

Japan’s Nikkei Index closed at 30,670.10, up 222.73 points or 0.73 per cent.

China’s Shanghai SE Composite Index closed at 3,662.60, down 52.77 points or 1.42 per cent, while the Shenzhen SE Component Index closed at 14,626.08, down 79.74 points or 0.54 per cent.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index closed at 25,502.23, down 311.58 points or 1.21 per cent.

South Korea’s KOSPI closed at 3,148.83, up 20.97 points or 0.67 per cent.

Taiwan’s TAIEX closed at 17,434.90, down 11.41 points or 0.065 per cent.

Published : September 14, 2021

Gold rises in opening trade #SootinClaimon.Com

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https://www.nationthailand.com/business/40006112

Gold rises in opening trade


The price of gold rose by THB50 in morning trade on Tuesday.

AGold Traders Association report at 9.28am said the buying price of a gold bar was THB28,000 per baht weight and selling price THB27,900, while gold ornaments cost THB27,303.16 and THB28,400, respectively.


At close on Monday, the buying price of a gold bar was THB27,750 per baht weight and selling price THB27,850, while gold ornaments cost THB27,257.68 and THB28,350, respectively.

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Published : September 14, 2021

Investing in digital currency may be dangerous, warns Bank of Thailand #SootinClaimon.Com

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https://www.nationthailand.com/business/40006111

Investing in digital currency may be dangerous, warns Bank of Thailand


The Bank of Thailand (BOT) on Monday warned people to be careful when investing in digital currency as they may be at risk of revealing their personal information and unwittingly have a hand in money laundering.

BOT governor Sethaput Suthiwartnarueput made this remark at “The Future of Financial System”, a second episode of the Thailand Next virtual forum.

He said the central bank does not encourage people to use digital currencies, like Bitcoin, as legal tender as they could face losses due to high volatility in value.

“BOT will supervise the baht-backed Stablecoins under e-money regulations, so it meets each individual’s purpose of possessing digital currency,” he said.

He added that the central bank will play a key role in supporting the following changes in the future:

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• More Open Data: Utilising data, which is considered a fifth important source, effectively.

• More Open Competition: Allowing new competitors, such as non-banking institutions, to compete in the financial market while enhancing banks’ potential in the competition.

• More Infrastructure: Building infrastructure, such as the Central Web Service (CWS) and Digital Factoring Ecosystem, to support competition as well as develop services and innovations.

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Published : September 14, 2021

Limited upside for SET despite positive sentiment #SootinClaimon.Com

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https://www.nationthailand.com/business/40006106

Limited upside for SET despite positive sentiment


The Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET) Index rose by 3.38 points, or 0.21 per cent, to 1,637.14 on Tuesday morning, witnessing a high of 1,640.40 and a low of 1,637.09 in opening trade.

The SET Index closed at 1,633.76 on Monday, down 1.59 points or 0.10 per cent. Transactions totalled THB86.15 billion with an index high of 1,642.63 and a low of 1,627.29.

Krungsri Securities forecast the index on Tuesday would fluctuate between 1,625 and 1,645 points despite positive sentiment of a rise in neighbouring stock markets and oil price, plus a decline in domestic Covid-19 infections.

It predicted uncertainty over volatility in fund flow, and the US Federal Reserve’s move to taper its quantitative easing programme sooner than expected would pressure the index.

It recommended buying the following companies’ shares as an investment strategy:

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▪︎ PTT, PTTEP, TOP and PTTGC, which benefit from the rising oil price.

▪︎ HANA, KCE, TU, CPF, GFPT, ASIAN, EPG, NER, SUN and APURE, which benefit from the weakening baht.

▪︎ COM7, SYNEX, SPVI and CPW, which benefit from Apple’s move to launch iPhone 13 on Tuesday.

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Published : September 14, 2021

Short-term weakening of baht possible amid new Covid wave worries #SootinClaimon.Com

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https://www.nationthailand.com/business/40006103

Short-term weakening of baht possible amid new Covid wave worries


The baht opened at 32.86 to the US dollar on Tuesday, strengthening from Monday’s closing rate of 32.91.

The Thai currency is likely to move between 32.80 and 32.95 during the day, Krungthai Bank market strategist Poon Panichpibool predicted.

Poon said the baht was likely to weaken due to the uncertainty in the Covid-19 and political situations in the country.

The Centre for Covid-19 Situation Administration (CCSA) warned that there might be a new Covid-19 wave at the end of this month.

The key resistance level for the baht would be from 32.90 to 33.00 to the dollar, which is the level at which exporters might sell the US currency, Poon said.

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Baht expected to move sideways as market awaits key US data

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Baht could wane today as investors offload Thai assets

He added that the dollar might be volatile and strengthen if US economic data were better than expected, and the US Federal Reserve decreased the quantitative easing faster or higher. The pressure from the dollar will not affect the baht from strengthening in the short term.

Published : September 14, 2021

U.S. inflation starting to look like a stimulus-led outlier #SootinClaimon.Com

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https://www.nationthailand.com/business/40006092

U.S. inflation starting to look like a stimulus-led outlier


Covid inflation is everywhere, but some have more of it than others. Among advanced economies, the U.S. is starting to look like the outlier.

That’s probably because it did more fiscal stimulus in the pandemic, economists say. The consensus is that high inflation won’t last long. But even if that’s right, the current elevated level has the potential to cause problems of its own — for President Joe Biden’s most ambitious economic plans at home, and for other countries too.

August data due Tuesday is set to show annual growth in U.S. consumer prices stayed above 5% in August for a third straight month, according to Bloomberg surveys. The median forecast was 5.3%, down from 5.4% the previous month. Most other developed countries have seen a spike too — just not nearly as big.

Much of the current wave of inflation has been driven by stretched global supply-chains. But research by the Institute of International Finance shows that while problems like longer delivery times are affecting all economies, they’re most acute in the U.S. — and price markups by firms are bigger there too. That suggests stronger American demand is a key part of the picture.

“What’s striking is just what an outlier the U.S. is, when you actually put all the countries’ supply-chain statistics next to each other,” says Robin Brooks, the IIF’s chief economist. “It’s pretty clear to me that the fiscal side is what makes the U.S. stand out.”

The gap may in part be a matter of timing.

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The U.S. rolled out vaccines and reopened for business faster than most, so the rush of post-lockdown demand happened there first, while it’s still gathering pace in other economies. The difference may also narrow if the historic surge in natural gas prices and other commodities drives up inflation faster in Europe in coming months, as some analysts anticipate.

Still, when explaining the U.S.’s current outpacing, “I place much more weight on fiscal stimulus,” says Jason Furman, an economics professor at Harvard. Rescue packages worth roughly one-quarter of GDP, bigger than in almost any other country, pulled the U.S. economy out of its pandemic hole earlier than many thought possible. But Furman says that’s not all they did: “I don’t know how you argue that you got dramatically faster real growth, but you didn’t get any faster price growth.”

Brooks says America’s exceptional recovery may spell trouble for the rest of the world if stimulus-driven inflation leads to earlier monetary tightening. That could pull cash out of emerging markets, like in the 2013 “taper tantrum.”

“The U.S. is emerging from this crisis much faster than others,” he says. “It’s potentially globally destabilizing — because nobody else was able to match that.”

None of this necessarily means the U.S. has made a grave economic error. Lacking strong European-style social safety nets, policymakers were short of options other than discretionary handouts to households — which they did more of than anyone else.

Their approach worked. And many analysts say that even if prices do climb a bit faster as a result, there’s no reason to fear a 1970s-style spiral — because labor isn’t strong enough now to keep pushing wages higher like it did back then — and monetary policy can easily rein inflation in. Meantime, though, there’s a risk that even transitory inflation could derail Biden’s $3.5 trillion program for cleaner energy and better childcare. He needs the votes of centrist Democrats in Congress like Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., who’s cited surging prices as a reason to scale it back.

Economists reckon Biden’s plan would be less inflationary than the $1.9 trillion stimulus approved in March, because it invests in building the economy’s capacity. But it could get lumped in the same category.

“There’s always a bit of fighting the last war,” says Furman, who generally backs a bigger role for government spending. “If there’s high inflation in the U.S., that could help discredit fiscal policy.”

Higher-for-longer prices may also sap the newly-acquired resolve of the Fed and its global peers to prioritize growth and employment, according to Dario Perkins, chief European economist at TS Lombard. “There is nothing inherently dangerous about inflation settling in, say, a 3-5% range” instead of the 1-2% that’s been normal for the past decade, he wrote last week. The bigger risk is that hitherto dovish central bankers “lose their nerve” and raise interest rates until it causes a recession, like they’ve done in the past.

Put differently: In the developed world, the fear of inflation may ultimately prove more damaging than inflation itself.

Published : September 14, 2021

U.S. Stocks Snap Slide Before CPI; Crude Oil Jumps: Markets Wrap #SootinClaimon.Com

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https://www.nationthailand.com/business/40006091

U.S. Stocks Snap Slide Before CPI; Crude Oil Jumps: Markets Wrap


U.S. stocks snapped a five-day slide, with energy companies leading the gains as crude oil extended a rally to a six-week high. Bonds yields declined and the dollar was little changed versus its major peers.

The benchmark S&P 500 closed in the green after fluctuating between gains and losses for much of the trading session. A drop in Moderna helped to keep the Nasdaq 100 in negative territory. OPEC predicted stronger demand for its crude on a combination of rising global fuel consumption and output disruptions elsewhere. Industrial metals rose, with aluminum reaching $3,000 a ton in London for the first time in 13 years amid supply disruptions.

“The market is not overvalued, but it is not as undervalued as it once was,” said Brian Wesbury, chief economist at First Trust Advisors. “A slowdown in GDP will likely slow profit growth, while rising inflation will eventually lift long term interest rates. Tax hikes are still a threat, as are tougher Covid-related restrictions that limit a service-sector recovery.”

Traders are marking time ahead of critical inflation data that traders will use to assess expectations about the timing of stimulus withdrawal and interest-rate hikes. A report on Tuesday may show consumer prices in the U.S. moderated in August.

Elsewhere, Chinese technology shares tumbled after a report that officials are seeking to break up Ant Group Co.’s Alipay. The country’s online platforms were also told to protect the rights of workers in the so-called gig economy. MSCI Inc.’s Asia-Pacific index retreated for the third time in four sessions.

Global stocks have been buoyed this year by robust earnings reports and a rapid recovery from the pandemic-induced recession. With valuations becoming stretched, sentiment soured over the past weeks, amid concerns that economic growth may stall as the delta variant of the coronavirus disrupts the anticipated return to normalcy, while inflation remains sticky. Retail and travel stocks declined.

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“Since the beginning of last week, realism has started to set into global equity markets as a long list of shocks percolate through the markets leading to an accelerated slowdown in economic activity in the U.S., a more subdued rebound in Europe and an unknown slowdown in China where the regulatory crackdown and its impact on investments are yet to be measured.” Sebastien Galy, a senior macro strategist at Nordea Investment, wrote in a note to clients.

Meanwhile, President Joe Biden’s $3.5 trillion tax-and-spending plan faces challenges. Democrat Senator Joe Manchin has cast doubt on the timeline for pushing Biden’s economic agenda through Congress, and proposed tax rates may be watered down to boost the chances of the package being passed.

Some of the main moves in markets:

Stocks

The S&P 500 rose 0.2% as of 4:07 p.m. New York time

The Nasdaq 100 was little changed

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.8%

The MSCI World index was little changed

Currencies

The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed

The euro was little changed at $1.1808

The British pound was little changed at $1.3835

The Japanese yen was little changed at 110.01 per dollar

Bonds

The yield on 10-year Treasuries declined two basis points to 1.32%

Germany’s 10-year yield was little changed at -0.33%

Britain’s 10-year yield declined one basis point to 0.74%

Commodities

West Texas Intermediate crude rose 1.3% to $70.65 a barrel

Gold futures rose 0.2% to $1,794.80 an ounce

Published : September 14, 2021