Inflation eased more than expected in October as falling gasoline and used car prices offset another rise in rent and a rebound in health insurance costs.
An underlying measure of price increases that the Federal Reserve watches more closely stayed elevated but also pulled back, possibly bolstering the case for the Fed to hold rates steady again after a flurry of aggressive hikes.
Consumer prices overall rose 3.2% from a year earlier, down from 3.7% in September, according to the Labor Department’s consumer price index. That pulled inflation closer to the more than two-year low it reached in June and July, before a surge in gasoline prices. On a monthly basis, prices increased were unchanged following a 0.4% rise the previous month.
What is core inflation right now?
Core prices, which strip out volatile food and energy items and which the Fed follows more closely, rose 0.2% after 0.3% bumps the previous two months. The advance pushed the annual increase to 4% from 4.1% in September, the lowest since September 2021.
Protect your assets: Best high-yield savings accounts of 2023
How long will it take for inflation to go back to normal?
Since reaching a 40-year high of 9.1% in June 2022, inflation has come down substantially but largely moved sideways in recent months.
Prices for goods such as used cars and furniture have dropped as pandemic-related supply-chain snarls have unwound. But the cost of services such as rent, car repairs and auto insurance, have continued to edge higher in part because of swiftly rising employee wages tied to labor shortages. Last month, however, inflation slowed more dramatically.
Driving down inflation to the Fed’s 2% goal is still becoming more challenging than it was several months ago. Barclays expects inflation broadly to dip to 3.5% in December and 2.6% at the end of 2024. Core price gains are projected to end the year at 3.9% and close out 2024 at 2.9%, higher than the research firm previously projected.
Will the Fed raise interest rates again?
Barclays expects the Fed to raise its key interest rate once more in early 2024, by a quarter percentage point, after hoisting it by 5.25 points in 16 months.
But other economists say inflation’s drop last month, along with falling wholesale costs and a cooling job market will trigger a faster pullback in inflation, prompting the Fed to stand pat.
More on inflation
For more stories on inflation, keep reading.
New inflation tax brackets
Inflation may impact what tax bracket you fall into.
The Internal Revenue Service said in its yearly inflation adjustments report that there will be a 5.4% increase in income thresholds to reach each new tier in the 2024/25 tax season.
Next year, the lowest rate of 10% will apply to individuals with taxable income up to $11,600 and joint filers up to $23,200. The highest rate of 37% will apply to individuals making more than $609,350, and married couples filing jointly who earn $731,200 or more.
The IRS makes these tweaks every year, relying on a formula pegged to the consumer price index in order to deal with inflation and to stave off “bracket creep,” which occurs when inflation moves taxpayers into a higher bracket though they’re not experiencing any real uptick in earnings or buying power.
Next year’s increase is below last year’s 7% bump, but far more than recent years when inflation was lower than the 3.7% annual inflation rate U.S. consumers experienced in September.
How are stock futures reacting ahead of the inflation report?
Stock futures rose ahead of the 8:30 a.m. ET CPI report. Dow futures gained 0.03% while futures tied to the S&P 500 rose 0.08% of of 8:10 a.m.
Cruise lines, too, are raising gratuity rates
Several major cruise lines have raised their gratuity prices in recent months, partly because of inflation. Royal Caribbean International began charging passengers $18 per guest, per day for non-suite staterooms Saturday, up from $16. Passengers in suites will pay $20.50, up from $18.50. The hikes follow similar moves from other cruise lines this year.
Inflation is prompting more Americans to take multiple jobs
The number of Americans working two or more jobs has reached its highest level since the pandemic’s start, a trend that suggests more of us are feeling inflation’s pinch.
Nearly 8.4 million people held multiple jobs in October, the Labor Department reported this month. They represent 5.2% of the workforce, the largest share of moonlighters since January 2020. Experts say people may be taking on extra work in response to inflation, which has outpaced wage growth through much of the past two years.
Inflation will blunt Social Security COLA boost in 2024
Inflation will more or less cancel out the annual cost-of-living adjustment (or COLA) in Social Security checks, seniors say, leaving many families struggling to keep up. Starting in January, more than 66 million beneficiaries will receive 3.2% more in their monthly checks, a bump that averages about $50.
COLA is meant to help Americans keep pace with inflation and maintain their standard of living. But many seniors say the Social Security hikes are falling short. For older adults, the biggest expense is health care.
Businesses are pressing for more tips to counter inflation
Tipping requests have exploded in the past couple of years, and inflation is one reason. After more than two years of rising consumer prices, businesses are feeling squeezed and looking to pass on expenses by requesting more tips for staff, experts say.
“Tipflation” takes many forms. Businesses prompt customers to leave large tips on checkout screens, or press for a tip on a takeout order. They may also calculate a tip on the after-tax amount, instead of the pretax total, or suggest a tip after adding an automatic gratuity to the bill.
Tired of tipping:Are we at a ‘tipping’ point? You’re not imagining it. How and why businesses get you to tip more
Tax Brackets:New IRS tax brackets and standard deductions for 2024: See how much they were raised
Credit: Source link


