The wholesale cost of U.S. goods and services posted the biggest
increase in July in nearly two years, led by higher oil prices, but
inflationary pressures in the economy were still largely invisible owing
to the coronavirus pandemic.
The producer price index shot up 0.6% last month, the government said Monday. Economists polled by MarketWatch had predicted a 0.3% increase.
Yet wholesale inflation more broadly was absent. The PPI is down 0.4%
in the past 12 months, a marked contrast to the beginning of the year.
The index was growing at a yearly pace of 2% in January.
Many companies have had to reduce prices to generate sales,
especially in businesses that have seen a big dropoff in customers
worried about contracting the virus. Hotels, airlines and indoor dining
have been particularly hard hit.
Another measure of wholesale costs known as core PPI — which
excludes food, energy and trade margins — rose 0.3% last month to mark
the third straight gain.
The core rate has risen a scant 0.1% in the past year, however.
By contrast, it was rising at a 1.5% yearly clip before the crisis.
Oil prices have bounced off pandemic lows and contributed to the
slight uptick in inflation. Wholesale gas prices jumped 10.1%. It’s
still relatively cheap to fill up, however.
Food prices fell slightly. In the past two months most of the
spike in wholesale food costs early in the pandemic have been basically
erased.
The wholesale cost of services, a volatile category from which
it is hard to deduce any trends, rose 0.5% in July. That’s the biggest
increase in more than a year. The wholesale cost of financial adviced
was a leading contributor.
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