Policy outlook
May’s weaker-than-expected inflation report is reassuring—but only to an extent. The lack of goods inflation is a welcome sign, though this is likely to have been driven by some element of activity or inventory front-loading, which is likely to wane at some point. As a result, tariff-driven price increases may not feed through to the CPI data for a few more months yet, so it is far too premature to assume that the price shock will not materialize.
Just like other economic activity data, there is little to learn from the current inflation figures, and we’ll likely need to wait until late summer before the tariff impacts start to show through—either in corporate profit margin data or the inflation data. Similarly, while the Fed will be pleased with today’s data, with so much uncertainty still churning under the surface, the central bank will likely want to wait a bit longer before it makes any policy moves.