Consumer prices keep on rising. Where does it end? | CNN Business (2024)

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From lumber and steel to paint and burrito bowls at Chipotle, prices are rising almost everywhere you look. That’s putting investors on high alert.

What’s happening: Wall Street is training its attention on the Consumer Price Index for May, which arrives on Thursday. The report is expected to show that prices excluding food and energy continued to notch strong gains last month, rising 3.4% over the previous year.

Including food and energy, economists believe consumer prices leaped 4.7% in the past 12 months. That would be the biggest jump since summer 2008.

A worker selects a loaf of fresh bread for a customer on a bakery stall inside Danilovsky market in Moscow, Russia, on Wednesday, March 24, 2021.In Russia, food prices in particular have shot up, adding to adecline in living standards during the pandemic. Photographer: Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg via Getty Images Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg/Getty Images Related article The perfect storm making everything you need more expensive

Traders are worried that inflation could force central banks to pull back support for the economy sooner than they’d otherwise like, hampering the fragile global recovery.

For now, reassurances from policymakers, who have maintained that price increases are temporary, appear to be working.

“I doubt the [Federal Reserve] will be spooked and I doubt markets will be unless we get the core well above [3.5%],” Societe Generale strategist Kit Juckes said in a research note Thursday, referring to the inflation reading without gas and food.

On Thursday, China’s central bank governor Yi Gang said in Shanghai that “price levels are generally under control and that the People’s Bank of China should “implement normal monetary policy.”

The European Central Bank, which met Thursday in Frankfurt, did not change its policy, issuing a statement that was essentially unchanged from its decision in April. Investors will pay close attention to any comments on inflation from ECB President Christine Lagarde during a press conference.

“We expect the ECB to avoid any tapering talk,” Dutch bank ING told clients, referencing discussions about when the central bank will slow down asset purchases, a major part of its stimulus program.

But a growing chorus of voices is insisting that decision makers — which do face a tough set of choices — need to acknowledge the risks of waiting too long to act, which could make their medicine more difficult to swallow.

“Policy is about balancing risks and these have shifted swiftly, significantly and decisively in an upward direction since the start of the year,” Andy Haldane, chief economist at the Bank of England, wrote in a column published by the New Statesman this week. “This makes it a dangerous moment, not just for central bankers but for the wider economy.”

The only market action is coming from meme stocks

US stocks remain stuck in limbo, with the S&P 500 up just 0.4% this month.

That makes the huge swings of stocks popular with investors on social media feel even more dramatic.

The latest stock to soar is Clean Energy Fuels (CLNE), which skyrocketed 32% on Wednesday. Shares are up another 6% in premarket trading Thursday.

People pass by GameStop at 6th Avenue on March 23, 2021 in New York. John Smith/VIEWpress/Corbis/Getty Images Related article GameStop names a new CEO and CFO, both from Amazon

But momentum may be fading for other names.

Earlier this week, traders coordinating on Reddit honed in on health care company Clover Health and fast food chain Wendy’s (WEN). Clover Health gained 118% on Monday and Tuesday before falling back 24% on Wednesday. Wendy’s (WEN), which jumped 26% on Tuesday, shed 13% in yesterday’s session.

Shares of e-commerce platform Wish fell 9% on Wednesday after spiking 50% on Tuesday.

On the radar: So far, Wall Street isn’t worried about a “spillover into broader markets,” according to Maneesh Deshpande, an equity derivatives strategist at Barclays.

Since the meme stock phenomenon emerged earlier this year, professional investors have gotten wise to the Reddit playbook, which often involves targeting heavily shorted stocks, Deshpande said.

Short sellers borrow shares of a stock and sell it, with the hope of buying it back at a lower price and making money off the difference. But if the price jumps dramatically, investors are forced to buy back in to limit their losses — further fueling a rally. This is what’s known as a “short squeeze.”

“Many investors have likely been tracking these names and incorporated the risk of another short squeeze in their investment process,” Deshpande wrote in a note to clients on Wednesday.

There’s also evidence that regulators are watching closely. GameStop (GME) — the original meme stock — said Wednesday that it received a request from the Securities and Exchange Commission last month to provide documents and information for an investigation into the trading of its stock.

The high cost of battling cyberattacks

Tackling a hack that cripples business operations is not a cheap affair.

JBS USA, the meat supplier whose entire US beef processing operation was shut down last week by a cyberattack, has disclosed that it paid an $11 million ransom in response to the breach.

The ransom was paid after most of the company’s facilities had come back online.

“This was a very difficult decision to make for our company and for me personally,” CEO Andre Nogueira said in a statement. “However, we felt this decision had to be made to prevent any potential risk for our customers.”

The revelation is a reminder of the exorbitant cost of dealing with cyberthreats following a string of high-profile attacks. Colonial Pipeline, which suffered a hack last month, also paid a ransom to hackers. (The US Justice Department said it had recovered $2.3 million of the payment earlier this week.)

Watch this space: The average cost of a ransomware attack has doubled this year, according to British security firm Sophos, leaping from $761,106 in 2020 to $1.85 million in 2021. That includes insurance, business lost, cleanup and any ransomware payouts.

The situation only appears to be getting worse, as corporations and governments scramble to respond. “It’s happening all the time,” Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm told CNN’s Jake Tapper on Sunday.

Up next

Chewy (CHWY) and Dave & Buster’s (PLAY) report results after US markets close.

Also today: The closely-watched US Consumer Price Index, a gauge of inflation, posts at 8:30 a.m. ET, along with initial jobless claims from last week.

Coming tomorrow: The Group of Seven meeting of world leaders kicks off in Cornwall, England.

Consumer prices keep on rising. Where does it end? | CNN Business (2024)

FAQs

Are consumer prices still rising? ›

Inflation has slowed since mid-2022 peak but remains above pre-pandemic average. Consumer price index for US urban consumers (CPI-U), California urban consumers, (CA CPI), and US urban consumers excluding more volatile energy and food prices (Core CPI).

What raises consumer prices? ›

An increase in the price of domestic or imported inputs (such as oil or raw materials) pushes up production costs. As firms are faced with higher costs of producing each unit of output they tend to produce a lower level of output and raise the prices of their goods and services.

Are prices ticked higher in February? ›

Inflation ticked up in February, according to federal data released Friday. The personal consumption expenditures price index, the Federal Reserve's preferred way to measure inflation, rose 0.3 percent in February. The annual inflation rate rose to 2.5 percent in February, up 0.1 percentage points from January.

Will prices ever drop back down? ›

They're most likely gone forever. That's because prices, on average, are a one-way ticket, generally rising over time, and falling only when something has gone wrong with the economy. Officials at the Federal Reserve who set the nation's monetary policy are determined to keep it that way.

What happens when consumer price increases? ›

The purchasing power of the consumer's dollar measures the change in the value to the consumer of goods and services that a dollar will buy at different dates. In other words, as prices increase, the purchasing power of the consumer's dollar declines.

Who benefits from inflation? ›

In general, inflation benefits borrowers who have lower fixed interest rates and owners of assets that rise along with inflation.

What would cause consumer prices to drop? ›

Decline in consumer demand: When demand falls, whether because the government is tightening its purse strings or the stock market is on a downswing and investors are hoarding more cash, businesses may lower prices to encourage people to spend.

What are three causes for the surge in consumer prices? ›

There are three main causes of inflation: demand-pull inflation, cost-push inflation, and built-in inflation. Demand-pull inflation refers to situations where there are not enough products or services being produced to keep up with demand, causing their prices to increase.

What prices are going up in 2024 in the USA? ›

The all-items Consumer Price Index (CPI), a measure of economy-wide inflation, was unchanged from May 2024 to June 2024 and was up 3.0 percent from June 2023. The CPI for all food increased 0.2 percent from May 2024 to June 2024, and food prices were 2.2 percent higher than in June 2023.

Are food prices going to keep going up? ›

Will food prices go down in 2024? As a whole, food prices are expected to rise in 2024, albeit at a much slower pace than they did in 2023, according to the USDA Economic Research Service food price outlook released in January.

Are grocery prices included in the inflation rate? ›

Meanwhile, the personal consumption expenditures price index, which excludes food and energy costs, rose 0.4% in January from the previous month, and 2.8% from the previous year, according to data released by the Commerce Department's Bureau of Economic Analysis last week.

Has the cost of living gone up? ›

Prices have grown about 20% overall since 2020, according to an analysis by the California Legislative Analyst's Office based on the most recent consumer price index data.

Is US inflation coming down? ›

Summary. Both overall and core PCE inflation stood at 2.5% year over year as of June, by our estimates. We project overall PCE inflation to average 2.4% in 2024 and 1.8% over 2025 to 2028—just below the Fed's 2% target.

Is inflation still rising in 2024? ›

Inflation inched downward in April, with prices rising by 3.4% on average in the last 12 months, down from 3.5% in March, according to the latest release of the Consumer Price Index on Wednesday. Although slight, it's the first time the pace of inflation has declined in 2024.

Are consumer goods getting more expensive? ›

The all-items Consumer Price Index (CPI), a measure of economy-wide inflation, was unchanged from May 2024 to June 2024 and was up 3.0 percent from June 2023. The CPI for all food increased 0.2 percent from May 2024 to June 2024, and food prices were 2.2 percent higher than in June 2023.

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