Line chart showing U.S. breakeven inflation rates as of March 25, 2022, May 31, 2024, and June 30, 2024. Shorter-term breakeven rates have come down from their elevated level in March 2022.
This line chart shows the three-month moving average of the year-over-year change in the Atlanta Fed’s sticky-price consumer price index and flexible-price consumer price index from 1968 to May 2024. Sticky CPI rose sharply in the 1980s, peaking at 14.7% in June 1980. While sticky CPI has risen since 2021, it has not reached 1980 levels. Sticky inflation may have peaked in February 2023 at 6.6%. It ended May 2024 at 4.4%. Flexible CPI peaked at 16.3% in March 1980 and has risen above those levels, peaking in March 2022 at 18.0%. It ended May 2024 at 0.6%.
Sources:
Top chart: Bloomberg, U.S. Treasury Department, and Wells Fargo Investment Institute, as of June 30, 2024.
Bottom chart: Bloomberg, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, U.S. Department of Labor, and Wells Fargo Investment Institute. Sticky-price and flexible-price consumer price index: monthly data from January 1, 1968, to May 31, 2024. Breakeven inflation rates equate nominal, or observed, Treasury interest rates with their inflation-protected counterparts. Fed = Federal Reserve. CPI = consumer price inflation. Sticky inflation is measured by components that change pricing less frequently, such as rents, education and public transportations. Flexible inflation is measured by components that change pricing more frequently, such as car rental, gas and electricity.
Key Takeaways
- Shorter-term inflation expectations have been in a holding pattern, recently, steadied by more modest disinflation in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) following noticeable declines from early 2022. “Stickier” services inflation within the CPI has been slower to decline than goods inflation, buoyed by pressure on rents and other less economically sensitive prices.
- Longer-term inflation expectations remain subdued by comparison, signaling that investors and households view recent price increases largely as the product of shocks likely to dissipate in coming months.