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Core PCE rose to 2.7%, pressuring the Fed’s rate path. Hot inflation data cuts rate-cut hopes, impacting USD, yields, and equity futures.
The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, the core PCE price index, rose 2.7% year-over-year in May.
New federal data showed that inflation edged up in May, but U.S. prices show only modest impact from U.S. tariffs.
The Commerce Department released the PCE inflation report for May which found the Federal Reserve's favored inflation gauge ticked slightly higher to 2.3%.
The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, the core PCE price index, rose 2.5% year-over-year in April, marking the lowest level for the index in over four years.
The Fed’s preferred measure of inflation, Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE), are out for the month of April. Results were positive across the board — eyebrow-raisingly so, in some cases ...
Annual inflation in the United States (US), as measured by the change in the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price Index, declined to 2.1% in April from 2.3% in March, the US Bureau of ...
The Fed's preferred inflation gauge, the PCE index, showed that price growth eased in April as inflation numbers trended closer to the central bank's target.
April personal consumption expenditure inflation was up just 0.1% for an annual rate of 2.1%, according to a Friday Bureau of Economic Analysis report.
April PCE Inflation Report Highlights The PCE Price Index rose 0.1% in April, in line with the FactSet consensus forecast and following no change in March.
PCE inflation within touching distance of target plus low monthly increases in headline and core inflation would have demonstrated a successful soft landing in an alternate and tariff-free world.
Coming this week: April's PCE and a clearer picture of U.S. GDP in the first quarter They’re backward-looking indicators, but economists can’t know where we are unless they know where we’ve ...
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