Producer prices rose at their highest annual pace on record in August and slightly above expectations, with the newest inflation-related datapoint likely to reinforce broader concerns about rising prices as higher production costs tend to trickle down to consumers.
The Labor Department said in a Sept. 10 statement that, for the 12 months ending in August, the final demand producer price index (PPI) jumped by 8.3 percent, the highest number in the history of the series, which dates from 2010. Consensus forecasts, according to Investing.com, showed economists expected an 8.2 percent rise in the PPI final demand measure.
On a month-over-month basis, the final demand PPI rose 0.7 percent in August, lower than the 1.0 percent recorded in June and July, suggesting the peak in producer price inflation may have passed.
Producer prices less food, energy, and trade servicesโa gauge often preferred by economists as it excludes the most volatile componentsโrose 0.3 percent month-over-month in August, well below the 0.9 percent figure in July, which was the biggest advance in the number since it climbed 1.0 percent in January.
On a year-over-year basis, producer prices excluding food, energy, and trade services rose 6.3 percent in July from a year earlier. This, too, was the biggest jump since the Labor Department started tracking the number in 2014.
Final demand producer energy prices surged by a seasonally unadjusted 32.3 percent over the year in August, goods advanced 12.6 percent, and food 12.7 percent, the data show.
High producer prices were also a key theme in the Federal Reserveโs most recent edition of the โBeige Book,โ released on Sept. 8, which provides periodic economic snapshots of the United States, based on reporting from the central bankโs 12 districts. The report covered the period of early July through August.
Half of the districts described input price inflation as โstrong,โ while the other half characterized it as โmoderate.โ Resource shortages were โpervasiveโ and input price pressures โwidespread,โ with many businesses reporting difficulty sourcing key inputs, even at greatly increased prices, the report says.
Byย Tom Ozimek