UK DATA: BRC-NielsenIQ Shop Prices: Deflation Stable; Elevated Food Prices in H2

Mar-04 06:27

Repeats the bullet from 00:01GMT.

BRC-NielsenIQ Shop Prices fell by 0.7% Y/Y for the second consecutive month, remaining in the range of -0.8% to -0.6% since September 2024 (excluding December which was distorted by Black Friday). The Shop Price Index remains in deflation for the seventh consecutive month.

  • On a sequential basis, Shop Prices rose 0.4% M/M (vs a fall of 0.4% in January), marginally below their February average (2010-2019 average of 0.52% M/M - note none of these data are seasonally adjusted).
  • Food price inflation accelerated to 2.1% Y/Y, after softening two-tenths to 1.6% in January. This is the highest Y/Y print since September 2024, after recording the lowest print since November 2021 in January. On a monthly basis, food prices rose 0.4% M/M - this is significantly above the February norm (2010-2019 February average of 0.18% M/M) but followed a 0.5% print in January - which was the weakest January print since 2015.
  • The Chief Executive of the BRC highlights "prices on the month saw the biggest increase in the last year...butter, cheese, eggs, bread and cereals all saw price hikes" and expects "food prices to be over 4% up by the second half of the year."
  • We estimate food inflation contributed 0.11ppt to the change in January headline CPI, and despite recent divergence between the official ONS series and the BRC-NielsenIQ Shop Price series particularly in December when data was distorted by Black Friday, the current data highlights the potential risk of elevated food prices in the months ahead.
  • Non-Food Prices remained in negative territory for the eleventh consecutive month, falling 2.1% Y/Y from -1.8% in January. This marks the lowest reading since October 2024 (excluding December distorted data).
  • On a monthly basis, non-food prices rose 0.5% M/M (after -0.9% in January), this is below the February norm (2010-2019 February price growth average of 0.72%). However, bear in mind that this data is showing very little correlation with the ONS non-energy industrial goods reading in recent months, which has moved comfortably into positive territory in Y/Y terms.
  • The press release states the rise is driven by January promotions ending.
  • Survey Period: 1 to 7 February 2025.
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Historical bullets

FED: Powell To Deliver Semi-Annual Testimony In Mid-Feb

Jan-31 21:48

The House Financial Services Committee's website confirms that Fed Chair Powell will deliver his semi-annual Monetary Policy Report on Wednesday Feb 12 at 1000ET.

  • The Semi-annual testimony will be closely eyed as Powell's first scheduled appearance since the January FOMC - and the House testimony on the 12th is the same day as the release of January CPI (and the week after nonfarm payrolls and benchmark revisions) so will be of particular interest.

US OUTLOOK/OPINION: Nonfarm Payrolls, Revisions Highlight Next Week In US Macro

Jan-31 21:39

Friday’s nonfarm payrolls for January highlights the US macro week. It's a highly anticipated report that could alter recent trends considering it will include annual benchmark revisions along with seasonal factors and an updated birth-death model. 

  • The preliminary estimate for the benchmark revision pointed to the level of payrolls being some 818k lower than currently reported for back in March 2024. There’s a broad expectation from what we can gather that the hit seen next week won’t be as large but it could still be significant. We also watch the seasonal revisions closely, as whilst they should have a zero-sum impact over the calendar year, we’ve noted some particularly favorable seasonal factors in recent months that have biased seasonally adjusted jobs growth higher.
  • With these considerations in mind, the early days of the Bloomberg consensus points to nonfarm payrolls growth of 150k after a solid three-month average of 170k. Note that the unemployment rate from the separate household survey won’t be affected by these revisions, having already seen its own seasonal factor revisions last month. A population control will complicate month-on-month changes in the levels of employment and unemployment but shouldn’t be significant for the rate, which is seen unchanged at 4.1% having surprised lower with 4.09% in December. The recent high is technically 4.23% in November having first popped to 4.22% back in July.
  • Two other special mentions for the week are: 1) rare remarks from FOMC Vice Chair Jefferson speaking on the economic outlook and monetary policy late on Tuesday with both text and Q&A, having last spoke on Oct 9. 2) ISM services on Wednesday after its priced paid series jumped 5.9pts to 64.4 in December for the highest since Feb 2023.
  • Away from macro but still material, the coming week brings the US Treasury's quarterly refunding process - our preview is here.

MACRO ANALYSIS: MNI US Macro Weekly: Uncertainty Vindicates Fed’s Patience

Jan-31 21:37

In a largely positive week for economic activity data, including in core durable goods and MNI Chicago PMI, the Q4 GDP accounts stood out by showing a very strong end to 2024 for the consumer.

  • As we go to press, though, President Trump has confirmed that tariffs would be imposed on Canada, Mexico, and China beginning this weekend – while also threatening further action against the likes of the European Union and across various import categories.
  • The combination of solid growth and policy uncertainty, along with stubborn “supercore” PCE inflation for December, seemingly vindicated the Federal Reserve’s “hawkish hold” at its January meeting.
  • A March rate cut is still a possibility but the bar for such an outcome has been set high.
  • That gets us to the first key release between now and then: Friday’s nonfarm payrolls for January is the highlight of the US macro week, and could alter recent trends considering it will include annual benchmark revisions along with seasonal factors and an updated birth-death model.
  • Other highlights in the upcoming week include ISM Services and the Treasury’s quarterly Refunding announcement (Wednesday), while FOMC Vice Chair Jefferson delivers commentary on the economic outlook and monetary policy Tuesday.

PLEASE FIND THE FULL REPORT HERE: 

US macro weekly_250131.pdf