ConsensusConsensus RangeActualPreviousRevised
Personal Income - M/M0.3%0.2% to 0.7%0.9%0.4%
Personal Consumption Expenditures - M/M0.2%-0.2% to 0.5%-0.2%0.7%0.8%
PCE Price Index - M/M0.4%0.3% to 0.4%0.3%0.3%
PCE Price Index - Y/Y2.5%2.4% to 2.5%2.5%2.6%
Core PCE Price Index - M/M0.3%0.2% to 0.4%0.3%0.2%
Core PCE Price Index - Y/Y2.6%2.6% to 2.7%2.6%2.8%2.9%

Highlights

Personal income is up 0.9 percent in January from December, well above the consensus of up 0.3 percent in the Econoday survey of forecasters. The increase reflects a 0.4 percent rise in wages and salaries, which is more in line with market expectations. There are larger increases in other types of income. Personal dividend income is up 1.7 percent. Government social benefits are up 1.8 percent in January, mainly from a 2.8 percent cost of living adjustment for social security. Rental income is up 1.4 percent in January. Farm proprietors' income with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments jumps 39.3 percent in January, but accounts for a relatively small portion of overall income.

Personal consumption expenditures are down 0.2 percent in January from December, below the consensus of up 0.2 percent. Spending on durables falls 3.0 percent in January as consumers moved up purchasing big ticket items like motor vehicles and appliances back in November and December in anticipation of higher prices and possible supply shortages. Spending on nondurables is down 0.2 percent and is likely in part due to less volume gasoline purchases as consumers were stuck at home during a long bout of bitter winter weather. Spending on services is up a small 0.3 percent in January from the prior month and shows some moderation from the recent trend.

The PCE is up 0.3 percent in January from December, the same increase as in December from November. On a monthly basis, prices are rising a bit faster than previously. The core PCE deflator is up 0.3 percent in December from the prior moth and picks up the pace slightly from the prior two months. Compared to a year ago, the PCE deflator is up 2.5 percent, a tenth higher than the up 2.6 percent in December and the same as up 2.5 percent in November. The underlying trend in the past few months is fairly steady and indicates that progress in disinflation is stalled. The core PCE deflator suggests that price pressures are more from food and energy costs. The core PCE deflator is up 2.6 percent in January from the year-ago month, three tenths lower than the up 2.9 percent in December.

The PCE deflator is the FOMC's preferred measure of inflation. The January readings will not change Fed policymakers' view that inflation remains somewhat elevated and more work needs to be done to bring it down to the 2 percent objective.

Market Consensus Before Announcement

Income is seen up 0.3 percent and nominal outlays up 0.2 percent in the latest month. The PCE price index is seen up 0.4 percent on the month and up 2.5 percent from a year ago. Core PCE is seen up 0.3 percent on the month and up 2.6 percent on the year.

Definition

Personal income represents the income that households receive from all sources including wages and salaries, fringe benefits such as employer contributions to private pension plans, proprietors' income, income from rent, dividends and interest and transfer payments such as Social Security and unemployment compensation. Personal contributions for social insurance are subtracted from personal income.

Personal consumption expenditures are the major portion of personal outlays, which also include personal interest payments and transfer payments. Personal consumption expenditures are divided into durable goods, nondurable goods and services. These figures are the monthly analogues to the quarterly consumption expenditures in the GDP report, available in nominal and real (inflation-adjusted) dollars. Economic performance is more appropriately measured after the effects of inflation are removed.

Each month, the Bureau of Economic Analysis also compiles the personal consumption expenditure price index, also known as the PCE price index. This inflation index measures a basket of goods and services that is updated annually in contrast to the CPI, which measures a fixed basket.

Description

The income and outlays data are another handy way to gauge the strength of the consumer sector in this economy and where it is headed. Income gives households the power to spend and/or save. Spending greases the wheels of the economy and keeps it growing. Savings are often invested in the financial markets and can drive up the prices of stocks and bonds. Even if savings simply go into a bank account, part of those funds typically is used by the bank for lending and therefore contributes to economic activity. In the past twenty years, the personal saving rate has diminished rapidly as consumers have spent a greater and greater share of their income. But that has reversed in part during the recession that began in 2008 as consumers have cut back on credit card use and have been rebuilding retirement accounts.

The consumption (outlays) part of this report is even more directly tied to the economy, which we know usually dictates how the markets perform. Consumer spending accounts for more than two-thirds of the economy, so if you know what consumers are up to, you'll have a pretty good handle on where the economy is headed. Investors can see how consumers are directing their spending, whether they are buying durable goods, nondurable goods or services. Needless to say, that's a big advantage for investors who determine which companies' shares they will buy.

The PCE price indexes have gained importance since the Fed announced a medium-term inflation goal of 2 percent based on the headline number on a year-on-year basis. The Fed forecasts inflation for both the headline PCE price index and the core rate (excluding food and energy).

Importance
Income is the major determinant of spending -- U.S. consumers spend roughly 95 cents of each new dollar. Consumer spending accounts directly for more than two-thirds of overall economic activity and indirectly influences capital spending, inventory investment and imports.

Interpretation
Increases (decreases) in income and consumption cause bond prices to fall (rally). As long as spending isn't inflationary, the stock market benefits because greater spending spurs corporate profits. Financial market participants pay somewhat less attention to personal consumption expenditures than to retail sales, which are released earlier in the month. However, they do closely monitor personal income and the PCE deflator.

Changes in personal income signal changes in consumer spending. For instance, a period of rapid income growth may signal future gains in personal consumption expenditures as well. Conversely, a period of declining income growth could signal an impending recession. While consumers often still must purchase necessities, discretionary purchases may decline, or moderate.

Consumers are more likely to increase spending when they see their stock portfolios increase in tandem with the stock market. When the stock market falls, spending is likely to decline because consumers feel less wealthy. Home prices and home equity have similar effects. Rising home prices boost the amount of equity consumers have in their homes. This allows access to Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) accounts. Plus consumers feel wealthier whether they have a HELOC account or not. When home prices decline, home equity falls and cuts into consumer spending.

Personal income is a comprehensive figure, but also incorporates taxes consumers must pay. By removing personal tax payments from personal income, we are left with disposable income. This is what consumers have left to spend on goods and services. Adjusting for inflation reveals growth in real disposable income.

On the inflation front, if PCE inflation is running below the Fed's goal of 2 percent inflation, that is seen as favorable toward Fed ease or neutral monetary policy. PCE inflation above 2 percent suggests that the Fed might be more inclined to raise policy rates.
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