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CPI Preview: Forecast by 10 banks

The US Bureau of Labour Statistics is expected to release the most important inflation measure, the US Consumer Price Index (CPI) figures, on Tuesday, June 13 at 13:30 GMT. The forecasts by the economists and researchers of 10 major banks regarding the upcoming United States inflation reading give insight about May reading and its impact as follows:

The annual inflation is expected to suffer a sharp fall to 4.1% in May vs. 4.9% in April. On a monthly basis, headline is expected at 0.2% vs. 0.4% last month. Meanwhile, US underlying inflation is expected to have risen by 0.4% month-on-month in May and 5.2% YoY vs. 0.4% and 5.5% in April, respectively.

Credit Suisse


We expect core CPI inflation to decline to 0.3% MoM in May, a welcome step lower after five consecutive months of registering 0.4% MoM. The YoY reading is likely to decline to 5.2%. Headline inflation is likely to decline to 0.1% MoM”.

Danske Bank


We expect the May CPI, released just ahead of the FOMC meeting, to slow down to 0.2% MoM (4.2% YoY) driven by negative contribution from energy prices. We also forecast Core CPI to continue cooling to 0.3% MoM (5.2% YoY).


ANZ


We expect core CPI inflation to rise by 0.4% MoM and headline CPI by 0.3% in May.

TDS


Core prices likely stayed firm in May, with the index rising a strong 0.4% MoM for a second straight month, also matching the MoM avg since June 2022. Goods inflation likely stayed positive, with shelter prices remaining the key wildcard (expect slowing). Retreating gas prices (-6% MoM) will drag non-core inflation. Our MoM forecasts imply 4.0%/5.3% YoY for total/core prices.

RBC Economics


We expect YoY growth in the US CPI to slow substantially to 4.1% in May from 4.9% in April. Gas prices were 20% below year-ago levels in May. Oil prices are down after surging in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. And soaring food inflation has cooled in recent months with back-to-back MoM declines in grocery prices over March and April.

NBF


The energy component may have had a negative impact on the headline index as prices likely fell in both the gasoline and natural gas segments. Expected gains for shelter could still result in a 0.2% monthly increase in headline prices. If we’re right, the YoY rate should come down from 4.9% to a 2-year low of 4.1%. The core index, meanwhile, could have advanced 0.3% on a monthly basis, something which would translate into a 5.1% annual gain.

Deutsche Bank


We expect a wafer-thin +0.01% MoM advance for headline CPI (vs. +0.37% previously) and a +0.37% increase for core (vs. +0.41%). This would lead the former to drop by about a full percentage point to 4.0% YoY, with the latter down -0.2% to 5.3%, with the 3, 6 and 12-month core readings all still struggling to gain much downward momentum below 5% at the moment.

CIBC


With prices at the pump averaging lower over the month, the total CPI was likely limited to a 0.1% increase in May, masking a hotter advance in categories outside of energy and food. Indeed, core CPI prices could have risen by 0.4%, extending April’s momentum, in line with continued strength in the labor market that will have worked to support demand, implying an acceleration in the Fed’s preferred sub-category of services ex. housing. The risks to the core figure could be slightly to the downside, as the rent measures could have resumed their deceleration following a temporary pause in April, and used car prices could have declined following a sharp increase in April. Moreover, the ISM services prices paid measure also fell in May.

Wells Fargo


Overall consumer price inflation likely moderated in May. We forecast the headline CPI was flat during the month, as gasoline prices fell and food prices appeared to hold steady. Core inflation, on the other hand, likely remained firm. Auction data suggest used vehicle prices rose again last month, and we look for ongoing strength in core services. Specifically, we suspect the core CPI rose 0.4% for the third consecutive month, which would leave the YoY change little improved at 5.3% in May.

Commerzbank


Across all goods and services, consumer prices are likely to have risen by only 0.1% in May compared to April. The YoY rate would then fall significantly from 4.9% to 4.1%. However, one should not conclude from this that the inflation problem is gradually disappearing. We expect the core rate, which excludes volatile energy and food prices and better reflects the underlying trend, to be high again. We forecast a core rate of 0.4% in MoM terms, which would be roughly in line with the increase in recent months. A clear easing of inflationary pressure is therefore still not in sight for this important indicator.

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