Inflation cools again ahead of the Federal Reserve's final interest rate decision in 2023

Inflation is coming down, but not without some twists and turns.

Overall inflation eased again in November, as a drop in gasoline prices offset another increase in rent.

But an underlying measure that the Federal Reserve watches closely stayed elevated, possibly buttressing the case for the central bank to hold off on interest rate cuts in the short term.

Consumer prices broadly rose 3.1% from a year earlier, down from 3.2% in October, according to the Labor Department’s consumer price index. That pulled inflation closer to the more than two-year low it reached in June, before a jump in gasoline prices. On a monthly basis, prices rose a modest 0.1%.

That’s the good news.

What is core inflation right now?

But core prices, which exclude volatile food and energy items, and which the Fed follows more closely, rose 0.3% after a 0.2% bump the previous month. The advance kept the annual increase at 4%, matching the lowest mark since September 2021.

Is inflation really getting better?

Inflation has slowed substantially since reaching a 40-year high of 9.1% in June 2022. The pullback was particularly encouraging in October, when both overall and core inflation moderated notably. That helped push down 10-year Treasury yields and fueled speculation that the Fed will lower interest rates more aggressively than anticipated in 2024.

But the monthly increase in core prices will likely hover at sturdy 0.3% for the next three months, Goldman Sachs says. That could make the Fed wary of reducing rates too early or too quickly, economists say.

Prices for goods such as used cars and furniture have been sliding as pandemic-related supply-chain snarls have resolved. But the cost of services such as rent, medical care, car repairs and auto insurance have continued to edge higher, at least in part because of swiftly rising employee wages tied to COVID-induced labor shortages.

Nancy Torborg, of Raleigh, North Carolina, says she and her husband haven’t felt the drop-off in inflation. Their weekly grocery bill has doubled to about $200 the past couple of years. Restaurant tabs also have shot higher, prompting the couple to dine out once every three months instead of monthly.

And they no longer attend movies that run them $30 to $40, opting instead to stream films at home.

Because of inflation, “I can’t afford to retire,” says Torborg, 67, a public school librarian. “I’ll be working until I’m physically unable to.”

When can we expect the Fed to lower interest rates?

The Fed is currently convening for the final time this year and is expected to announce on Wednesday that it will hold its key rate steady for a third straight meeting. The lengthy pause follows the central bank's most aggressive rate-hike campaign in decades as it fought to curb inflation. The Fed is also expected to update its forecast for the economy and interest rates. Markets expect four or five quarter-point rate cuts next year, bringing rates to a range as low as 4% to 4.25%. Economists, however, reckon the Fed will predict just two cuts.