US DATA: Philly Non-Mfg Firms See Faster Price Increases Despite Sensitivity
Aug-26 15:08
The Philly Fed non-manufacturing survey special questions on inflation expectations show a somewhat similar split in the activity indexes touched upon earlier with their historically large discrepancy between strong firms’ own activity and weak regional activity in August.
The median firm reported increasing its own prices by 2.5% over the past year, up from 2.0% in the May question and having essentially paused annual price increases through end 2024/early 2025. It’s the strongest actual increase since the May 2024 survey.
Own price expectations also firmed from 2.0% to 2.5%, above a typical median of 2% in surveys over the past almost two years but not an unprecedented level.
Firms’ expectations of consumer inflation meanwhile cooled from a particularly strong May release, with those for the next year reverting to 3.3% from 4.8%. Ten-year ahead expectations also cooled to 3.5% after 4.8%, still above the 3.1% in February prior to reciprocal tariff announcements but within ranges.
Elsewhere, these non-manufacturing firms reported greater price sensitivity over the quarter (59% reported higher sensitivity vs 50% in May) and fewer expect cost changes over the near-term (57% vs 65%). Of those that do expect cost increases, a similar almost two thirds expect those to be higher, with price changes over a median 3 months vs 2.5 months in the May survey.
US DATA: Manufacturing Price Pressures More Acute Than For Services (2/2)
Aug-26 15:04
Looking across both the Richmond Fed's services and manufacturing surveys, there was a divergence in indicated price pressures, suggestive of tariffs feeding through to manufacturers more immediately.
The Richmond Fed's manufacturing prices paid rose to a 28-month high 7.2% (reflecting changes over the prior 12 months), up from 5.7% prior; prices received were relatively steady at 3.1% (3.2% prior anda 2nd consecutive decline). 12-month expected prices paid rose for a 3rd consecutive month to 7.0% (6.0% prior, still below April's 8.0% high), with expected prices received at 4.0% for a 3rd month.
For services firms, current prices paid ticked down 0.1pp to 5.1% (from 5.2%), with current received up to a 4-month high 3.3% (3.2% prior).
Expected prices paid pulled back to a 6-monthlow 4.9% (5.2% prior), with expected received up to a 3-month high 3.9% (3.2% prior).
US STOCKS: Steady to Mixed on Narrow Ranges, Industrials, IT Outperforming
Aug-26 15:03
Stocks are holding steady (SPX eminis) to mixed early Tuesday, off lows while holding to narrow ranges after Monday's modest decline. Currently, the DJIA trades down 15.51 points (-0.03%) at 45273.75, S&P E-Minis up 1 points (0.02%) at 6457.25, Nasdaq up 32.8 points (0.2%) at 21486.44.
Industrials and Information Technology sector shares led gainers in the first half: GE Vernova +3.02%, Boeing +2.04%, General Electric +1.81% and Howmet Aerospace +1.78%.
Leading tech stocks in the first half included: Palantir Technologies +2.30%, Advanced Micro Devices +2.26%, Monolithic Power Systems +2.21% and QUALCOMM +1.92%.
On the flipside, Consumer Staples and Communication Services sector shares underperformed in the first half: Keurig Dr Pepper -2.99%, Brown-Forman -2.80%, Bunge Global -2.50% and Archer-Daniels-Midland -1.90%.
Energy stocks weighed by a drop in crude prices (WTI -0.77 at 64.03): Devon Energy -1.29%, Diamondback Energy -1.23%, EQT -1.02% and Coterra Energy -0.98%.