US core producer prices rise at six-year high

Sharp gains in the cost of cigarettes and cars helped push core US producer prices up at their fastest rate in six years in January…

Sharp gains in the cost of cigarettes and cars helped push core US producer prices up at their fastest rate in six years in January, the government announced today.

Overall, the producer price index - which measures prices received by farms, factories and refineries - rose just 0.3 per cent in the month.

But the core index, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, shot up 0.8 per cent, the biggest gain since December 1998. Wall Street economists had forecast a 0.2 per cent gain in both overall and core producer prices and the higher-than-expected figures hit markets hard.

US government bond prices plunged and stock futures turned negative, while the dollar strengthened as the report bolstered expectations the Federal Reserve will keep raising interest rates well into 2005.

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"It is going to make people more concerned and make people think at this point that the Fed is going to be more aggressive," said Mr Robert MacIntosh, chief economist at Eaton Vance Management in Boston.

Energy prices tumbled 1 per cent, building on a sharp fall in December, and food costs slipped 0.2 per cent. However, prices received for cigarettes jumped 3.4 per cent, the biggest gain since April 2002.

A department analyst said that rise may have partly reflected a shift in the cost of maintaining a farmer's minimum guaranteed price for tobacco over to industry from government.

Automobile costs, which had dropped in December, rose 1.2 per cent, while prices of light trucks and SUVs climbed 0.9 per cent.

Vehicle prices have been volatile due to on-again, off-again sales incentives from automakers. Those two factors - vehicles and cigarettes - went only a bit of the way in explaining the jump in core prices.

A department analyst said the core rate still would have advanced 0.8 per cent with car and light truck costs stripped out. Similarly, he said the core index excluding cigarettes would still have been up 0.7 per cent.