That streak has finally ended. Online prices declined by 1% year-over-year in July, snapping a string of nearly two years of persistent inflation, according to a report released Tuesday by Adobe.
The shift is even more pronounced on a month-over-month basis where online prices dropped by 2% in July, Adobe said.
The findings bode well for the inflation crisis, signaling a potential easing of the pricing pressures that have squeezed consumers and raised recession fears.
Of course, it may take considerable time before inflation gets anywhere back to normal levels, and Adobe noted that online grocery prices continue to surge.
Inflation remains way too high across the US economy.
While cooling inflation would be a positive development, the factors behind the pricing shift online may not be great news. Adobe pointed to a combination of “wavering consumer confidence and a pullback in spending” as well as oversupply by some retailers.
The online deflation was led by a 9.3% year-over-year plunge in electronics prices, Adobe said, the area consumers spend the most.
Beyond electronics, online prices for toys fell sharply by 8.2% in July, the most since late 2019, according to Adobe.
Online prices for apparel rose 14 consecutive months until June, when they dipped 0.1% year-over-year, Adobe said. That deflationary shift continued in July as online apparel prices fell by 1% year-over-year and by 6.3% month-over-month.
Although deflation has returned to online shopping overall, Adobe found online prices moved in the wrong direction in a few key categories.
Online grocery prices surged by 13.4% year-over-year in July, marking a new record, the report found. That is an acceleration from the previous records of 10.3% in April and 11.7% in May.
Similarly, Adobe said prices for pet products online jumped by 12.6% year-over-year, marking a record and the 27th consecutive month of rising prices.