The U.S. annual inflation rate surged to 8.6 percent in May, topping the market estimate of 8.3 percent.
The core inflation rate, which excludes the volatile food and energy sectors, climbed 6 percent year-over-year, higher than economists' expectations of 5.9 percent. Core inflation jumped 0.6 percent month-over-month.
All of the inflation indexes ran high in May, with food prices soaring 10.1 percent and energy increasing 34.6 percent.
New vehicles jumped 12.6 percent, while used cars and trucks rose 16.1 percent. Apparel prices swelled 5 percent.
Shelter costs swelled 5.5 percent, transportation services increased 7.9 percent, and medical care services rose 4 percent.
In May, meat prices remained expensive as beef (+10.2 percent), pork (+13.3 percent), ham (+11.1 percent), and chicken (+17.4 percent) have all surged.
Eggs spiked 32.2 percent, while milk advanced 15.9 percent. Fruits and vegetables increased 8.2 percent.
Coffee rose at a remarkable pace of 15.3 percent. Roasted coffee jumped 15.6 percent and instant coffee increased 12.9 percent.
Has Inflation Peaked?
One of the major discussions today is if inflation has peaked.Over the last couple of months, some components of the U.S. marketplace have eased, particularly used car prices. However, many other goods and services have continued to increase in cost, especially on the energy front.
The persistent jumps in a broad array of energy commodities, including crude oil, natural gas, gasoline, and diesel, could send the consumer price index (CPI) higher in the coming months.
Mohamed El-Erian, a top economist and chief economic advisor at Allianz, is doubtful of an "inflation top."
Moving forward, inflation will need energy prices to take a breather, says Ipek Ozkardeskaya, a senior analyst at Swissquote Bank.
"For inflation to ease persistently, we need to see energy prices soften," she said in a research note on Friday.
"Those who boldly said inflation has peaked and is coming down may have to change their minds," he said.
"This inflation is just getting started. I mean, we've had it for a long time in financial assets, but now it's finally moved into consumer goods and it's got a long way to go," he said.
Other U.S. policymakers are waiting for more data to determine if the economy has seen the worst of higher prices or if inflationary pressures will subside.
“I don’t want to declare victory on inflation before I see really compelling evidence that our actions are beginning to do the work," Mester stated.
During a Senate Finance Committee hearing on Wednesday, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen conceded that the United States would endure "unacceptable levels of inflation" for some time, although she "very much hopes that it will be coming down now."
'Nowhere to Hide’
U.S. families are paying an average of $311 more per month for goods and services, according to recent estimates from Moody's Analytics.Because inflation is broad-based, post-pandemic economic conditions have "left consumers nowhere to hide," says Greg McBride, the senior vice president and chief financial analyst at Bankrate.
"The biggest increases are coming in categories that are absolute necessities—shelter, food, and energy," McBride told The Epoch Times. "This is why we're beginning to see signs of strain among consumers that are dialing back discretionary spending or looking to economize as much as possible."
The best strategy that consumers and investors could employ, particularly in a stagflation environment, is turning to gold and silver, says William Stack, a financial advisor at Stack Financial Services.
According to Stack, these precious metals are some of the top-performing assets amid stagflation.
Although silver has tumbled about 7 percent year-to-date, gold has held steady with a gain of nearly 1 percent. Both metal commodities have outperformed the leading U.S. benchmark indexes.
"Historically, gold and silver have continued to do well even in the years immediately following stagflationary periods, increasing 5–8x in price over a 3–5 year period," Stack told The Epoch Times.
"Conditions appear to be similar in many ways and more extreme in some ways. We recommend clients and retirees protect themselves by owning insured equity-linked accounts that protect their principal from market declines while allowing the earnings potential to keep up with inflation and saving a portion (10-20 percent) of their savings in precious metals as well."
