- Personal Spending for December rose .9% versus estimates of a .7% gain and a .5% increase in November.
- PCE Core(M-o-M) for December rose .1% versus estimates of a .2% increase and a .2% gain in November.
BOTTOM LINE: US personal spending increased more than expected in December as incomes grew, suggesting a pickup in demand at the end of 2005 that may help boost first-quarter growth, Bloomberg reported. The PCE Core, the Fed’s favorite inflation gauge, rose a less-than-expected .1%. Inflation-adjusted spending on big-ticket items such as cars and furniture rose 5.0% in December, the largest gain since July. For all of 2005 the PCE Core gained 1.9% versus a 2.3% increase in 2004. Incomes rose 5.4% for all of 2005, almost double most measures of inflation. I continue to expect consumer spending to remain relatively healthy and measures of inflation to decelerate over the intermediate-term.
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