The Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge moved even higher in December, driven in part by rising food and energy prices. However, a closely watched measurement of underlying inflation trends ...
Inflation in the US, as measured by the change in the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price Index, edged higher to ...
One of the most consequential takeaways from the latest PCE report showed that core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, was stable in December. An earlier reading from the CPI ...
Use this inflation calculator to see how prices are changing: Inflation is the loss of purchasing power over time as prices rise. It is often expressed as a percentage and generally refers to a trend ...
The personal consumption expenditures index rose 2.6% in December. Core PCE, omitting food and energy, was 2.8%. The December monthly increase was .07%, bringing the annual core PCE inflation rate ...
The CPI and PPI prints imply that PCE Core will come in at a cool .2% when it is reported at month end. Core CPI printed cool at .2% versus .3%, with headline higher than core due to seasonal ...
However, the PPI’s gauge of airfares picked up notably. After the CPI report, several economists called for the December core PCE — due at the end of this month — to rise 0.2%.
On a three-month annualised basis — seen as a more accurate picture of the trajectory of inflation — the core PCE price gauge ...
The Fed’s preferred inflation measure is the core price index for personal consumption expenditures (PCE), which will be released later this month for December. But knowing the core PPI and CPI ...
The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index rose 0.3% last month after an unrevised 0.1% gain in November, the Commerce Department said on Friday. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast ...