
December CPI Pops 0.3%, Gold Brushes $4,600
After a two-month data void caused by Washington’s funding standoff, the Bureau of Labor Statistics finally dropped December’s Consumer Price Index—and the numbers refuse to play along with the “mission-accomplished” narrative on inflation. Headline CPI rose 0.3 percent for the month, lifting the index to 324 and pushing the yearly gain to 2.7 percent—still north of the Federal Reserve’s vaunted 2 percent target. Core CPI, which strips out food and energy, ticked up 0.2 percent and now sits 2.6 percent above last December. With gold prices spiking to $4,629 an ounce on Tuesday, investors appear unconvinced that price pressures are tamed.
Source: BLS
Shelter once again did the heavy lifting, advancing 0.4 percent in December and 3.2 percent over 12 months. Rent and owners’ equivalent rent each climbed 0.3 percent, underscoring how housing costs continue to gnaw at household budgets despite the Fed’s most aggressive rate campaign since the 1980s. Food costs were even less forgiving: both grocery and restaurant tabs jumped 0.7 percent for the month, leaving the food index 3.1 percent higher year-on-year. Energy posted a modest 0.3 percent rise in December, but electricity bills have soared 6.7 percent and piped natural gas a bruising 10.8 percent over the past year, offsetting the relief motorists see at the pump.
Volatility crept into discretionary categories as well. The recreation index notched its largest one-month gain on record—up 1.2 percent—while airline fares rocketed 5.2 percent after months of declines. Used-car prices and communication services offered rare reprieve, slipping 1.1 percent and 1.9 percent, respectively. Yet the broader data still paint an inflation picture that is pessimistic. The CPI-W, closely watched for cost-of-living adjustments to Social Security, is up 2.6 percent, and the Chained CPI—often touted as a more accurate gauge—registers a similar 2.5 percent rise.…