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Interesting analysis of the wholesale deflation number:
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CNBC <--
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The 0.4% gain in core prices is old news, as can be seen in the components that caused the increase. For example, there was a 1.6% gain in the price of metal machine tools, a 4% increase in the price of tires, a 2.6% increase in the price of light trucks, and a 0.7% gain in the price of appliances. The common denominator for all of these is that they reflect prices pressures now gone with the wind. One price increase that reflects a new trend is the trend in the price of mobile homes, which increased 1.2% in October following a 0.8% increase in September. Perhaps the increase reflects recent foreclosure activity, which has forced home owners to trade down to smaller homes.
The deflation picture is most glaring in the prices of goods in earlier stages of the production process. Crude materials, which reflect materials at the earliest stage of the production process, fell 18.6% overall and a record 17.0% excluding food and energy, beating the previous record set, astoundingly, just a month earlier when prices fell 9.4%. Prior to September, the previous record was one 7.7% decline in February 1975.
Intermediate goods prices, which reflect the prices of goods at the middle stage of the production process, fell 3.9% overall, a record drop that beat the previous record of -2.3% set in April 2003. Core intermediate prices fell a record 1.7%, beating the previous record of -0.5% set in July 2001.
The massive declines in prices at earlier stages of production underscore the deflationary tendency that exists in the economy at the moment and which will exist for many months to come.