News

September CPI Report Shows Downward Trend for Inflation Intact, ... The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the Consumer Price Index increased 3.7% in September compared with the same period ...
An underlying inflation measure that captures longer-lasting trends remained elevated. Consumer prices increased 4.9% from a year earlier, down from 5% in March and a 40-year high of 9.1% last ...
CPI data shows inflation fell to 4% in May, a new 2-year low, ... Core prices, which exclude volatile food and energy items and better capture longer-term trends, have been tougher to tame.
June’s inflation report will be looked at not so much for what the headline numbers show than what’s in the underlying data.
In a move that could significantly influence the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) monetary policy decisions, Australia is ...
"Inflation in the United States remains on a downward trajectory. Over the past three months, the core CPI has increased at a 3.1% annualized rate, the slowest pace since September 2021.
Prices continued to trend down toward the Federal Reserve's 2% target last month despite the rollout of sweeping tariff hikes. The Consumer Price Index rose 0.2% in April for an annualized increase of ...
The headline CPI number, which includes food and energy, is expected to edge up 0.1%, slowing from the 0.2% increase in February. On a Y/Y basis, that would come to +2.6% vs. +2.8% in the prior month.
Inflation has receded from 2022 peaks but remains elevated. Here is a chart showing how the CPI—and the core CPI, which removes the volatile food and energy categories—has trended since 2015.
The consumer price index rose 2.4% for the 12 months ended in March, down from 2.8% in February, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Thursday, indicating that inflation decelerated. Watch ...
Headline inflation rose 3.4% on an annual basis in December, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Thursday, up from 3.1% the previous month. That was the biggest gain in three months and easily ...