Economic Report: Fed’s Beige Book finds ‘widespread’ price hikes in November

The outlook: While the economy was growing at a moderate pace in November, businesses were raising price at a rapid clip across a broad swath of the economy , according to the Fed’s latest Beige Book survey released Wednesday.

“Prices rose at a moderate to robust pace, with price hikes widespread across sectors of the economy,” the survey found.

Input costs increases were “wide-ranging” due to strong demand for raw materials, logistical challenges and labor market tightness, the report said.

Tight labor markets meant wages were also rising at a “robust” pace across most of the Fed’s 12 districts, according to the report.

One silver lining was that some inputs were becoming more widely available, easing some of the pressure.

“Strong demand generally allowed firms to raise prices with little pushback, though contractual obligations held back some firms from increasing prices,” the report concluded.

Big picture: Fed Chairman Jerome Powell has sounded a hawkish note in two days of testimony on Capitol Hill, perhaps after reading a draft of this Beige Book report. Powell opened the door to ending the Fed’s asset purchases a few months sooner than planned.

“The Fed is making a clear policy pivot to a focus on inflation,” said Tim Duy, chief U.S. economist at SGH Macro Advisors.

Market reaction: Stocks
DJIA,
+0.36%

SPX,
+0.67%

were slightly higher on Tuesday as markets struggled to digest what the Fed’s pivot meant for asset prices.

This post was originally published on Market Watch

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