US consumer inflation’s annual pace slowed more than expected in November, the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics said. Headline CPI dipped to a 2.7% increase vs. the year-ago level while core CPI fell to 2.6%, a four-year low. Some analysts raised doubts about the numbers, citing the disruption in data collection due to the government shutdown. “The report wasn’t just noisy and full of gaps, it provided a downwardly biased perspective of inflation,” said Gregory Daco, chief economist at EY-Parthenon. “The downward bias stemmed from the carry-forward methodology that assumed an unchanged price index in October for all surveyed data – imparting a downward bias to inflation dynamics.”
