All Eyes on Jackson Hole

We received a slew of economic data this past week, but the true market mover lies ahead this Friday: Chair Powell’s upcoming Jackson Hole address. While inflation data surprised in parts—especially the PPI with its sharp jump in portfolio management fees—the underlying story remains that price pressures are not accelerating in the areas that the Fed watches most closely. In fact, some prominent economists lowered their PCE inflation estimate by five basis points, despite the headline noise. That is a telling sign. It suggests that core inflation, when adjusted for statistical anomalies, is broadly in line with the Fed’s path toward easing.

The debate on tariffs is resurfacing, and I continue to emphasize that tariff-induced inflation is a one-time tax-driven price adjustment—not a signal of overheating. The Fed should not respond to it. We’ve been down this road before. Temporary import price increases, especially when not associated with tight labor markets or monetary expansion, do not merit restrictive policy. Whether Powell reinforces this distinction next week could shape market sentiment for months to come.

Retail sales came in right on target, with a modest upside surprise in the control group. Combined with prior revisions, this could slightly bump up second-quarter GDP from its current 3.1% pace. It’s becoming clear that the second quarter was stronger than initially thought—not a boom, but certainly not the soft patch many feared. Jobless claims remain anchored around 220,000, showing labor market resilience despite a slowdown in hiring. Curiously, the volatility we used to see in these weekly jobless prints has disappeared, possibly due to changes in reporting methodology, but the trend is clear: employment remains stable.

The Empire State Manufacturing survey surprised on the upside as well, underscoring a modest rebound in regional activity. Still, these are not game-changing indicators. The Fed will focus more heavily on inflation expectations and forward-looking labor data heading into its September meeting.