Rabu, 12 Juni 2019

nflation tame: Consumer prices rise 0.1% in smallest bump in 4 months, CPI shows - MarketWatch

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Consumer prices rose slightly in May, but inflation more broadly remains quite low

The numbers: Falling gasoline and used-vehicle prices held inflation in check in May and inflation pressures more broadly eased again, potentially making it easier for the Federal Reserve to reduce the cost of borrowing soon if the U.S. economy weakens any further.

The consumer price index rose a scant 0.1% in April, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said Wednesday, matching the MarketWatch forecast. It was the smallest increase since January.

More notably, the increase in the cost of living over the past 12 months slowed to 1.8% from 2%. The rate of inflation has tapered off from nearly 3% since last summer.

Another closely watched measure of inflation that strips out food and energy also advanced a meager 0.1% last month.

The yearly increase in the so-called core rate slipped to 2% from 2.1% — right in line with the Federal Reserve’s target for inflation.

Read: Weak unions, globalization not to blame for shrinking slice of income pie for workers

What happened: The cost of food advanced 0.3% in May and accounted for nearly half of the increase in the consumer price index. Medical care increased 0.3%, rents rose 0.2% and airline tickets also went up.

Gasoline prices fell 0.5% in May, however, after a nearly 6% increase in April. With the cost of oil falling, gas prices might go even lower for the time being.

Used-vehicle prices also dropped 1.4% to mark the fourth straight drop.

The price of clothes was unchanged following two declines in a row.

After adjusting for inflation, hourly wages increased 0.2% in May. They’ve risen a modest 1.3% in the past year.

Big picture: Waning inflation largely reflects the lower cost of energy and more moderate increases in health care.

Yet there’s some evidence the recent downtrend could come to a halt soon, leaving inflation close to the Fed’s 2% goal. Rents continue to rise with the housing market tight, for one thing, and the cost of health care no longer appears to be falling.

If inflation stabilizes around 2%, the Fed would have more leeway to determine when it needs to cut interest rates. So long as the economy expands at a steady pace and ongoing trade wars don’t throw it off kilter, the central bank can stand pat. But if the economy dips again the Fed will act quickly.

Read: ‘Whiff of U.S. recession’? It’s in the air again, but strong labor market the antidote

What they are saying?: “Except for rents, there is an awful lot of nothing going on in the CPI,” said chief economist Chris Low of FTN Financial, who thinks the Fed should cut interest rates.

“Inflation at the current run rate neither prevents nor forces action on rates,” said senior U.S. economist Eric Winograd of AllianceBernstein. “It is low enough to allow for rate cuts but not so low as to require them.” Yet Winograd thinks the Fed will cut rates once or twice this year.

Market reaction: The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -0.10% and S&P 500 SPX, -0.20% rose slightly in Wednesday trades. Stocks fell on Tuesday to break a five-day winning streak.

The 10-year Treasury yield TMUBMUSD10Y, -0.98% slipped to 2.12%.

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https://www.marketwatch.com/story/consumer-inflation-rises-01-in-may-smallest-bump-in-4-months-cpi-shows-2019-06-12

2019-06-12 13:57:00Z
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Ford recalling 1.2 million Explorers over suspension issue - CNN

The recalled SUVs are from model years 2011 through 2017. Ford (F) said that cars frequently ride over rough terrain may experience a fractured toe link on their rear suspension, which can affect steering and increase the risk of an accident. Ford said one customer reported hitting a curb when the toe link broke, but it is not aware of any related injuries.
Ford said it will spend about $180 million to fix the problem, which will be done at no cost to the cars' owners.
Ford also announced three other smaller recalls. One is a recall of 12,000 Ford Taurus and Flex cars as well as Lincoln MKS and MKT vehicles sold in Canada. They have a similar problem with their toe links. Ford said it is aware of one crash involving minor injuries associated with the problem. The affected vehicles range from model year 2009 through 2017.
Tyson Foods recalls more than 190,000 pounds of chicken fritters shipped nationwide
Ford is also recalling 123,000 Ford F-150 pickups from 2013 with 6-speed automatic transmissions that could potentially downshift into first gear unintentionally. And it is recalling 4,300 Ford Econoline vehicles from model years 2009 to 2016 which are used as ambulances or school buses. Those vehicles have a weld in the clutch that could fail, preventing them from moving.

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/06/12/business/ford-explorer-recall/index.html

2019-06-12 13:59:00Z
CAIiEFYFrMOz9GQaw0G0YtTG5BIqGQgEKhAIACoHCAowocv1CjCSptoCMPrTpgU

Ford recalls 1.3M vehicles for suspension, transmission woes - WITI FOX 6 Milwaukee

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Ford recalls 1.3M vehicles for suspension, transmission woes  WITI FOX 6 Milwaukee

DEARBORN, Mich. — Ford is recalling over 1.3 million vehicles mainly in North America to fix rear suspension and transmission control software problems.

View full coverage on Google News
https://fox6now.com/2019/06/12/ford-recalls-1-3m-vehicles-for-suspension-transmission-woes/

2019-06-12 13:41:00Z
CAIiEEvfIOAZ2kUQBRZvCv06fpgqGQgEKhAIACoHCAow_o3_CjD4hvgCMLeq5AU

Consumer inflation rises 0.1% in May, smallest bump in 4 months, CPI shows - MarketWatch

Getty Images
Consumer prices rose slightly in May, but inflation more broadly remains quite low

The numbers: Falling gasoline prices held inflation in check in May and inflation more broadly still appeared quite tame, though rent, groceries and medical care all cost more last month, government figures show.

The consumer price index rose a scant 0.1% in April, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said Wednesday, matching the MarketWatch forecast. It was the smallest increase since January.

The increase in the cost of living over the past 12 months also slowed to 1.8% from 2%. The rate of inflation has tapered off since last summer.

Another closely watched measure of inflation that strips out food and energy also advanced 0.1% last month.

The yearly increase in the so-called core rate slipped to 2% from 2.1% — right in line with the Federal Reserve’s target for inflation.

Read: Weak unions, globalization not to blame for shrinking slice of income pie for workers

What happened: The cost of food advanced 0.3% in May and accounted for nearly half of the increase in the consumer price index. Medical care increased 0.3%, rents rose 0.2% and airline tickets also went up.

Gasoline prices fell 0.5% in May after a nearly 6% increase in April. With the cost of oil falling, gas prices might go even lower for the time being. Used-vehicle prices also dropped 1.4% to mark the fourth straight drop.

The price of clothes was unchanged following two declines in a row.

After adjusting for inflation, hourly wages increased 0.2% in May. They’ve risen a modest 1.3% in the past year.

Big picture: Waning inflation in the past year largely reflects the lower cost of energy and more moderate increases in health care.

Yet there’s some evidence the recent downtrend could come to a halt soon, leaving inflation close to the Fed’s 2% goal. Rents continue to rise with the housing market tight, for one thing, and the cost of health care no longer appears to be falling.

If inflation stabilizes around 2%, the Fed would have more leeway to determine when it needs to cut interest rates. So long as the economy expands at a steady pace and ongoing trade wars don’t throw it off kilter, the central bank can stand pat.

Read: ‘Whiff of U.S. recession’? It’s in the air again, but strong labor market the antidote

Market reaction: The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -0.04% and S&P 500 SPX, -0.03% were set to open slightly lower in Wednesday trades. Stocks fell on Tuesday to break a five-day winning streak.

The 10-year Treasury yield TMUBMUSD10Y, -0.33% slipped to 2.12%.

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https://www.marketwatch.com/story/consumer-inflation-rises-01-in-may-smallest-bump-in-4-months-cpi-shows-2019-06-12

2019-06-12 12:45:00Z
52780311750635

Tesla shares jump after Musk says company may have 'a record quarter on every level' - CNBC

Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla

Beck Diefenbach | Reuters

Tesla shares rose on Wednesday after CEO Elon Musk said that he believes the electric automaker has a "decent shot at a record quarter on every level."

"I want to be clear: There is not a demand problem," Musk said at the company's annual meeting with shareholders on Tuesday evening. "Sales have far exceeded production and production has been pretty good so we're actually doing well."

Tesla shares jumped 4% in premarket trading Wednesday. Musk also said "it won't be long" before the company has an electric car with a range of 400 miles.

Cowen questioned Musk's confidence in a note to investors after the meeting, saying "basic microeconomic theory would suggest that goods or services that don't have a demand problem don't see their prices lowered by half a dozen times in 4-5 months." Cowen has an underperform rating and a $140 price target on Tesla shares.

Baird, on the other hand, said "the narrative is overly negative" around Tesla, adding that it thinks "Bear arguments will be disproven in the coming weeks and months." Baird has a $340 price target and an outpeform rating on the stock. The firm said there have been "several signs of steady demand over the past few weeks," a point Musk emphasized during the presentation. Musk said that 90% of Tesla's orders are coming "from non-reservation holders, so these are new customers," he said.

Tesla's stock is down nearly 35% for the year as of Tuesday's close of $217.10 a share but the stock has slowly come back after hitting a low of $179 a share last week.

A key metric for Tesla sales bounced back last month, as the company's Model 3 vehicle saw deliveries higher than expected in May. Overall, Tesla increased total U.S. sales in the month of May by 73% compared to last year, according to data from Motor Intelligence.

"We continue to see the shares in a tug of war between skeptics and extreme believers, where we have fallen into the skeptical camp for several years," Cowen said.

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https://www.cnbc.com/2019/06/12/tsla-stock-jumps-as-musk-says-tesla-may-have-a-record-quarter.html

2019-06-12 11:49:58Z
52780312980160

Tesla shares jump after Musk says company may have 'a record quarter on every level' - CNBC

Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla

Beck Diefenbach | Reuters

Tesla shares rose on Wednesday after CEO Elon Musk said that he believes the electric automaker has a "decent shot at a record quarter on every level."

"I want to be clear: There is not a demand problem," Musk said at the company's annual meeting with shareholders on Tuesday evening. "Sales have far exceeded production and production has been pretty good so we're actually doing well."

Tesla shares jumped 4% in premarket trading Wednesday. Musk also said "it won't be long" before the company has an electric car with a range of 400 miles.

Cowen questioned Musk's confidence in a note to investors after the meeting, saying "basic microeconomic theory would suggest that goods or services that don't have a demand problem don't see their prices lowered by half a dozen times in 4-5 months." Cowen has an underperform rating and a $140 price target on Tesla shares.

Baird, on the other hand, said "the narrative is overly negative" around Tesla, adding that it thinks "Bear arguments will be disproven in the coming weeks and months." Baird has a $340 price target and an outpeform rating on the stock. The firm said there have been "several signs of steady demand over the past few weeks," a point Musk emphasized during the presentation. Musk said that 90% of Tesla's orders are coming "from non-reservation holders, so these are new customers," he said.

Tesla's stock is down nearly 35% for the year as of Tuesday's close of $217.10 a share but the stock has slowly come back after hitting a low of $179 a share last week.

"We continue to see the shares in a tug of war between skeptics and extreme believers, where we have fallen into the skeptical camp for several years," Cowen said.

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https://www.cnbc.com/2019/06/12/tsla-stock-jumps-as-musk-says-tesla-may-have-a-record-quarter.html

2019-06-12 11:48:43Z
52780312980160

Dow Jones Futures: Tesla Shareholder Meeting, Medidata Stock Takeover Buzz, Dave & Buster's Earnings In Focus - Investor's Business Daily

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  1. Dow Jones Futures: Tesla Shareholder Meeting, Medidata Stock Takeover Buzz, Dave & Buster's Earnings In Focus  Investor's Business Daily
  2. Tesla pickup truck will have better performance than a Porsche 911, says Elon Musk  Teslarati
  3. Elon Musk at Tesla shareholder meeting: 'It won't be long before we have a 400-mile range car'  CNBC
  4. What's moving markets today: Live updates  CNN
  5. EXPLAINER: How much does Tesla CEO Elon Musk get paid? And why?  Business Insider
  6. View full coverage on Google News

https://www.investors.com/market-trend/stock-market-today/dow-jones-futures-tesla-shareholder-meeting-medidate-stock-dave-and-busters-crowdstrike/

2019-06-12 11:07:25Z
52780312980160