Author Topic: Wholesale Prices Surge by Record 11.2 Percent as Inflation Woes Continue  (Read 305 times)

Offline RB in GA

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From the Epoch Times https://www.theepochtimes.com/wholesale-prices-surge-by-record-11-2-percent-as-inflation-woes-continue_4401406.html

Wholesale Prices Surge by Record 11.2 Percent as Inflation Woes Continue
By Tom Ozimek April 13, 2022 Updated: April 13, 2022

Wholesale prices in the United States accelerated at their fastest annual pace on record in March, delivering a fresh sign that persistent inflation continues to plague the U.S. economy.

The Producer Price Index (PPI), which tracks inflation before it hits consumers, rose by an annual 11.2 percent in February, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said Wednesday. That?s the highest rate of wholesale price inflation in the history of the data series, which dates back to 2010.

The sky-high PPI reading is likely to amplify concerns about inflation more broadly, as higher wholesale prices tend to get passed along to consumers.

Inflation in the United States rose at a blistering 8.5 percent in the year through March?the fastest pace in 41 years?the most recent government data on the Consumer Price Index (CPI) showed. Some economists say the mismatch between the CPI number and the PPI figure means consumers should brace for higher prices.

?Since YoY consumer prices only rose by 8.5 percent, businesses are still eating a lot of cost increases that will soon be passed on to their customers. This means future #CPI increases will be much greater when they do!? economist Peter Schiff said in a tweet.

The wholesale price spike exceeded forecasts, which predicted a more modest but still-high 10.6 percent rise.

Rep. Tom Emmer (R-Minn.), who recently co-sponsored a bill to curb what he described as ?our nation?s spending addiction? that he said was contributing to inflation, took to Twitter to comment on the record-breaking producer price surge.

?Wholesale prices are surging beyond economists predictions. Americans cannot afford any more of the Biden Administration?s inflationary policies,? Emmer said in a tweet.

Major contributors to the wholesale price spike were sharp increases in energy and transport costs. Final demand energy rose 5.7 percent over the month in March, while transportation and warehousing jumped 5.5 percent month-over-month.

?Ugly Trend?
The rise in wholesale prices adds to pressure facing the Federal Reserve to tighten policy in a bid to tame surging inflation.

?The ugly trend of inflation is why the Federal Reserve is poised to hike interest rates by a half percentage point in May and begin letting their bond portfolio run off,? Bankrate Chief Financial Analyst Greg McBride told The Epoch Times in an emailed statement.

?The Fed will be pressing firmly on the brake pedal?not just pumping the brakes?in an effort to slow demand and bring the inflation rate back down,? he added.

The Federal Reserve has embarked on a path of monetary tightening, with officials raising rates and contemplating shrinking the Fed?s balance sheet as early as May.

Economists polled by Reuters expect the Fed to deliver two back-to-back half-point interest rate hikes in May and June while estimating the probability of a recession next year at 40 percent.

Offline JohnyMac

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March CPI 8.5%
Wholesale 11.2%
1980 Formula March CPI 17.1%
The highest inflation using the 1980 formula during Carters years 14.1%.

Wholesale is just a precursor of what to expect in 3-months. 

Ready for the coming recession?
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Offline pkveazey

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I've been paying close attention to what's going on in the economy and trying to warn friends and relatives to prepare for it. I know what's coming and how bad it's going to be and hope I have prepared enough to handle it. My ego wants me to have a sign printed up that says, "I TOLD YOU SO, BUT YOU WOULDN'T LISTEN". But that's not really my nature so I'll just forget about the sign and try to be sympathetic to all the pissing and moaning that I'm going to have to listen to. People just don't seem to understand just how bad it's going to be. Nobody talks about it but during the great depression, a lot of people hardly even noticed it because they saw it coming and were prepared for it. They stocked up on everything they thought they would need and didn't keep their money in the bank. My Mother lived on a huge farm where my Grandfather was the Caretaker. They grew what they needed and had all the normal farm animals. They knew about the Depression but were barely affected by it. My Father lived in the City and saw the Depression up close and personal but his Father had a job working in a large tobacco factory and his Father would buy used furniture and renew it and opened his own furniture store where he would sell the refurbished furniture at low prices and still make a good profit. In my Mother's family there were 9 children and in my Father's family there were 11 children.

Offline JohnyMac

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Great writeup PKv.  :cheers:
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