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Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Thursday, May 15, 2025

WASHINGTON (AP) " U.S. wholesale prices dropped unexpectedly in April for the first time in more than a year despite President Donald Trump's sweeping taxes on imports. The producer price index " which tracks inflation before it hits consumers " fell 0.5% last month from March and rose 2.4% from April 2024, the U.S. Labor Department reported Thursday.

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Economists had expected that producer prices rose modestly in April. A 0.7% drop in services prices brought the index down.

On Tuesday, the Labor Department reported that consumer prices rose just 2.3% last month from April 2024 " smallest year-over-year gain in more than four years.

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Well I am SHOCKED. The 'experts' expected a rise in wholesales prices but instead, they were DOWN .5% from March. This is a HUGE deal. First, our 'experts' once again proved their forecasts are fueled by political bias and/or they have no idea how trade actually works.

Second, there is ZERO need for the Fed to continue holding interest rates high when wholesale prices are actually deflationary.

Also - first drop in 4 years - I wonder what kind of ------- had been running the show for the prior 4 years to bring such horrible results.

#1 | Posted by ScottS at 2025-05-15 09:03 AM | Reply

Oh, and for those wondering - the 'expert' consensus was an INCREASE of .3% for April. So, the 'experts' were off by a full .8%. They deserve no credibility.

#2 | Posted by ScottS at 2025-05-15 09:20 AM | Reply

I wonder what kind of ------- had been running the show for the prior 4 years to bring such horrible results.

Who was the brain dead------------ who had a 15% unemployment rate?

#3 | Posted by reinheitsgebot at 2025-05-15 10:07 AM | Reply

Squats gets his -------- wholesale.

#4 | Posted by LegallyYourDead at 2025-05-15 11:47 AM | Reply

Another view ...

US retail sales rise slightly as tariffs start to curb demand
www.reuters.com

... Retail sales increase 0.1% in April; March data revised up

Core retail sales decrease 0.2%; spending still holding up

Producer prices drop 0.5%, travel category leads plunge in services

U.S. retail sales growth slowed in April as the boost from households front-loading motor vehicle purchases ahead of tariffs faded and consumers pulled back on spending elsewhere against the backdrop of an uncertain economic outlook.

The apprehension over the economy's prospects, sparked by President Donald Trump's on-again, off-again tariffs policy, was underscored by retail giant Walmart which on Thursday joined the list of companies from airlines to auto manufacturers that have either withdrawn or refrained from giving financial guidance.

Wholesale prices for services like airline tickets and hotel rooms fell last month, other data showed, also flagging softening demand, which does not bode well for an anticipated rebound in growth this quarter after the economy contracted in the January-March period for the first time in three years.

"We are now witnessing the first-order effects of tariffs on the economy through reduced spending," said Tuan Nguyen, a U.S. economist at RSM US. "While a recession is no longer our base case over the next 12 months due to the recent reduction in tariffs, the likelihood has increased that the U.S. economy will experience several quarters of sluggish growth."

Retail sales edged up 0.1% last month after an upwardly revised 1.7% surge in March, the Commerce Department's Census Bureau said. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast retail sales, which are mostly goods and are not adjusted for inflation, would be unchanged after a previously reported 1.5% jump in March. Estimates ranged from a 0.6% decline to a 0.4% gain.

Retail sales have see-sawed this year amid Trump's announcements of import duties. Though Washington and Beijing struck a 90-day truce in their trade war last weekend, slashing tariffs on imports, uncertainty remained over what happens thereafter.

Sales at auto dealerships dipped 0.1% after accelerating by 5.5% in March. Receipts at sporting goods, hobby and musical instrument stores slumped 2.5%, while receipts at miscellaneous store retailers fell 2.1%. ...


#5 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-05-15 01:03 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 3

#5 | Posted by LampLighter

Indeed.

This 'scott s' character is certainly full of the 's'.

#6 | Posted by Angrydad at 2025-05-15 01:45 PM | Reply

My grocery bill last night says differently MAGA't.
Stop with your lies.

#7 | Posted by a_monson at 2025-05-15 05:56 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

My grocery bill last night says differently MAGA't.
Stop with your lies.

#7 | Posted by a_monson

f off..
..video of dope showing 7 dollar gas.....another person
said you live in california....I live in a red state and turned
camera to gas at 2.55.

guessing same with you...

why did I say F OFF ?

because of this....and you'll notice how these despicable democrat rump rubbing pathological liars tell us about the lower prices....with stupid fishing slitz

"Trump's egg price fiction has suddenly become reality"
www.cnn.com

#8 | Posted by shrimptacodan at 2025-05-17 01:18 PM | Reply

__________
#1 | Posted by ScottS at 2025-05-15 09:03 AM
... the 'expert' consensus was an INCREASE of .3% for April. So, the 'experts' were off by a full .8%. They deserve no credibility.

The numbers you refer are usually an average of number of "experts" who make them several months in advance, i.e., well before Trump attacked the world economy with the "most stupid tariffs" (that's according to even most MAGA tariff-sympathetic economists and "experts") ever seen.

The numbers, and the resulting "expert opinions", reflect much sharper slowdown of the economy than "experts" expected, solely due to businesses dumping existing inventory and volume discounts to businesses that rushed to stock on pre-tariff arriving inventory - IOW, caused by Trump's much higher and wider tariffs than businesses and sane "experts" expected. That's a one-off, and some prices for inelastic items will resume their upward movement, coupled with tariffs/taxes, while others may rise on demand shortages or drop for a month or two due to rising prices.

Then again, you probably approve of President who can not only institute what amounts to a "federal/national sales tax" of any size on any item, but also raise or lower it at any time for any reason (or any whim) at all? Trump lost whatever economic "credibility" he might have had even with people who generally support tariffs (for protectionist / "fairness" reasons), no matter how poorly economically "justified" they may be.

.

#2 | Posted by ScottS at 2025-05-15 09:20 AM
Well I am SHOCKED. The 'experts' expected a rise in wholesales prices but instead, they were DOWN .5% from March. This is a HUGE deal. First, our 'experts' once again proved their forecasts are fueled by political bias and/or they have no idea how trade actually works.

Second, there is ZERO need for the Fed to continue holding interest rates high when wholesale prices are actually deflationary.

Again, you are using a single [one-off] variable for a single period of usually multi-months of economic indicators to make a sweeping economic policy statement / decision. Cherry picking volatile and "unadjusted for real life" indicators is "unwise," to put it mildly.

Also - first drop in 4 years - I wonder what kind of ------- had been running the show for the prior 4 years to bring such horrible results.

Considering the drop was undeniably caused by an abrupt and radical (and illegal) Trump's tariff/tax decision, contrary to even his economic disciples, we know who is the certifiable s**thead that is running the show now.

Here is just one of real experts, who successfully ran the largest active bond funds in the world (Allianz-PIMCO) - Mohamed El-Erian:
|------- "While quoting the central banker [Powell] verbatim, El-Erian asks if the concerns raised "Sounds familiar?" This two-word response by the renowned economist highlights how the Fed's messaging mirrors prior inflationary cycles and supply-side shocks over the years.

... [El-Erian is] alluding to the stagflation of the 1970s, a period El-Erian has frequently referenced in past commentary. He has warned that tariffs and trade wars risk creating conditions reminiscent of the Carter era, marked by low growth and high inflation.
-------|

Let's see other, more relevant and forward-looking numbers from the same and next days' reports:
April's Empire State Manufacturing went -1.1 to -9.2, Industrial Production lost 0.3%, Import prices +0.5% (future inflation indicator) and Consumer Sentiment for May dropped to 50.8 (-26.5% Y-Y, -30% since Jan. 2025) - all were expected to improve or stay stable.

How is that for being SHOCKED?

Curb your enthusiasm. And welcome to the "95% Club"!
__________

#9 | Posted by CutiePie at 2025-05-18 08:56 PM | Reply

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