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We got some welcome news on inflation today right as new Fed chair Kevin Warsh was going before Congress to talk about monetary policy. We’ll dig into price stability and interest rates in today’s newsletter, plus big bank earnings and the pork lobby. Read to the end for a Photoshop job I’m particularly proud of. — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor
Fed Chair Kevin Warsh speaks to lawmakers today.
Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
Inflation slowed in June. What does that mean for interest rates?
The surprisingly strong CPI numbers mean the Fed is likely to hold interest rates steady at its meeting later this month, Marketplace’s Mitchell Hartman reports.
After rising for three consecutive months, the consumer price index fell in June. The annual inflation rate was 4.2% in May, down to 3.5% last month.

It helped that gas prices fell nearly 10%, as the Iran war waned, temporarily. But some of that’s been reversed already now that the U.S. and Iran are trading strikes again.

The core inflation rate, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, fell to 2.6% year-over-year, tantalizingly close to the Federal Reserve’s 2% target.

Economists and policymakers have been worried about the recent resurgence in inflation. So there was a lot to like in this report, like deceleration across both goods and services.

Gargi Chaudhuri at BlackRock pointed in particular to services where prices could have spiked thanks to World Cup tourism.

“Airfares, lodging away from home, food away from home — that would have a little bit of the World Cup flavor to them, if you will — they haven’t generated a meaningful inflationary impulse,” he said.

Now, what the Fed might make of this report as it plots future interest rate policy to fight inflation is up for debate.

In the dovish, glass half-full camp is Jay Hatfield at Infrastructure Capital Advisors. He pointed out that one big component of inflation — rent — is basically flat now.

“The report was very positive for future inflation. Hopefully put the Fed back on track to hold rates for now and then cut when energy prices come down when the Strait reopens,” he said.
READ MORE


 
News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Wall Street cheered slowing inflation in June, but higher oil prices in July tempered their celebration a bit. The S&P 500 closed up 0.4%, the Dow hardly moved and the Nasdaq rose 0.9%.

  • Five of America’s biggest banks together reported $49 billion in earnings, smashing expectations and records. One common theme in those quarterly reports? More consumers are paying with credit cards.

  • Shares in Yum Brands fell more than 2% today after reports the government was investigating Taco Bell for potential ties to a disease outbreak. The chain says no connection has been confirmed, but removed some menu items anyway.

  • The price of Brent cruise oil passed $87 a barrel this morning before settling at $84.73. The national average gas price fell just under $3.86 a gallon.

The Trump administration
  • What’s moving oil prices? President Donald Trump backed off a plan to charge a toll in the Strait of Hormuz, but resumed its blockade of the strategic waterway while promoting foreign investment in the U.S.

  • In his first congressional testimony since taking over the Federal Reserve, Kevin Warsh said today’s inflation numbers don’t mean “mission accomplished,” but didn’t reveal the central bank’s plans. Check out our explainer on why Fed Chairs testify before Congress.

  • Since dismantling USAID, the Trump administration has tied some African aid to access to health data.

Local economies
  • The state of New York paused data center construction for a year in a first-of-its-kind ban.

  • You probably don’t pay much attention to hay prices but maybe you should. Hay feeds livestock, and more expensive cow food means higher beef and dairy prices.


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“Lots of effort targeting folks that aren't what you might call ‘pork loyalists.”
— Glynn Tonsor, agricultural economist at Kansas State University
While beef prices soar, pork has been fairly stable. Bacon has gotten a bit cheaper, even. But there’s not a ton of demand, even as Americans go wild for protein. Can the pork lobby change that with a splashy ad campaign? 
READ MORE
Jamie Dimon's face photoshopped on the popular
Tony Wagner/Marketplace, images from NBCUniversal and Win McNamee/Getty Images
Final note
One more thing on big banks
Chase Bank started a Substack earlier this year in a bid to reach young people. The casually lower-cased newsletter “stacking paper” mixes internet-y slang (“the spreadsheet is spreadsheeting”) with basic personal finance advice (“ there’s nothing more important than staying on top of your debt”) and totally natural mentions of the  Chase Credit Journey®. 

I’m teasing Jamie Dimon and co. a bit here, but I can’t be mad at anyone getting smart about debt, budgeting and retirement savings. That said, Marketplace has programming for any age: “Million Bazillion” for under-12s, “Financially Inclined” for the high school set and “This Is Uncomfortable” for twentysomethings and beyond. 
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