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Inflation Surges: Fed's Target Now Further Away
10 Apr
Summary
- February inflation rose 0.4%, indicating persistent price increases.
- Core inflation, excluding food and energy, also rose 0.4% in February.
- Consumer spending saw only a 0.1% rise in February.

Inflationary pressures intensified in February, according to new data from the Commerce Department. The personal-consumption expenditures price index climbed 0.4% compared to the previous month, an acceleration from January's 0.3% rise. This uptick suggests that price increases were already firming before the conflict in Iran began.
Digging deeper, the core inflation rate, which excludes the impact of food and energy prices, also increased by 0.4% in February. This indicates that underlying price pressures are broad-based, adding to concerns that progress towards the Federal Reserve's target of 2% inflation had stalled.
Further economic indicators revealed sluggish consumer spending. Inflation-adjusted consumer outlays rose by a mere 0.1% in February, following a flat performance in January. This suggests a slowdown in consumer demand, which could be impacted by rising prices and economic uncertainty.
The upcoming March consumer-price index report is anticipated to show a significant month-over-month increase of 0.9% and a year-over-year rise of 3.3%. This would represent the largest annual inflation increase since May 2024.