- ORIGINAL NEWS
Worker pay rose more than expected in Q1 in another sign of persistent inflation
- SUMMARY
The Employee Cost Index (ECI), a measure of salaries and benefits offered to workers, has been on the rise.
In the first quarter of this year, the ECI jumped by 1.2%, a higher increase than anticipated.
This sharp surge signals that the Federal Reserve’s efforts to combat inflation through a series of interest rate hikes may be falling short.
The Fed closely tracks the ECI as an indicator of underlying inflationary pressures.
The significant increase in compensation costs raises concerns that inflation may remain stubbornly high, keeping the central bank from easing its monetary policy stance.
Prior to the ECI announcement, markets expected the Fed to maintain interest rates at the current range.
However, following the release, traders have adjusted their expectations.
They now believe there is an equal chance of an interest rate cut in September, and the possibility of no cuts this year has also increased.
Overall, the rising ECI adds to concerns that inflation remains elevated, despite the Fed’s efforts to bring it under control.
This development increases the likelihood that the central bank will continue its cautious approach to monetary policy, holding off on interest rate cuts in the near future.
- NEWS SENTIMENT CHECK
- Overall sentiment:
negative
Positive
Negative
“Employee compensation costs jumped more than expected to start the year, providing another danger sign about persistent inflation.”
“The increase added to concerns that a string of 11 Fed interest rate hikes has not done enough to ease price pressures and likely helps keep the central bank on hold before it can start easing monetary policy.”