The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge rose 5.4% in March, the highest since 1983

The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge rose 5.4% in March, the highest since 1983


The Federal Reserve’s favorite inflation measure showed intensifying price pressures in February, rising to its highest annual level since 1983, the Commerce Department reported Thursday.

Excluding food and energy prices, the personal consumption expenditures price index increased 5.4% from the same period in 2021, the biggest jump going back to April 1983.

Including gas and groceries, the headline PCE measure jumped 6.4%, the fastest pace since January 1982.

The core PCE increase actually was a touch lower than the 5.5% Dow Jones estimate. On a monthly basis, the gauge was up 0.4%, in line with estimates.

Surging prices dented consumer spending, which rose just 0.2% for the month, below the 0.5% estimate. Disposable income increased 0.4%, a touch below the 0.5% expectation, while real disposable income fell 0.2%. Savings nudged higher to $1.15 trillion, or a rate of 6.3%.

In other economic news Thursday morning, the Labor Department reported that initial jobless claims totaled 202,000 for the week ended March 26. That was an increase of 14,000 from the previous week and ahead of the 195,000 estimate, but still below the level that prevailed prior to the Covid pandemic.

Continued claims, which run a week behind the headline number and count those who filed for a second week, dropped to just over 1.3 million, the lowest level since Dec. 27, 1969.

While the employment picture has tightened, it is inflation that has captured much of the attention as price increases continue.

The Fed has reacted to rapidly surging inflation by tightening policy, with an interest rate increase in March expected to be followed by hikes at each of the remaining six meetings this year.

Goods prices climbed by 1.1% for the month, the fastest increase since October 2021, pressured by supply chain backups that have bedeviled the economy for much of the pandemic era. Those problems were expected to be “transitory,” a description the Fed had to abandon when it finally capitulated on the loosest monetary policy in its history.

However, the price increases flipped in February from longer-lasting goods to shorter-term purchases. Inflation for durables was flat, while non-durable prices rose 1.8%.

Services inflation was held relatively in check, rising just 0.3%.

However, energy prices jumped 3.7% for the month — before abating in March — while food inflation rose 1.4%.



Source

Trump’s Iran ultimatum and signals of a possible deal keep investors on tenterhooks
World

Trump’s Iran ultimatum and signals of a possible deal keep investors on tenterhooks

US President Donald Trump during a prime-time address to the nation in the Cross Hall of the White House in Washington, DC, US, on Wednesday, April 1, 2026. Alex Brandon | Bloomberg | Getty Images Investors are caught between positioning for a swift deal that ends the war and a significant escalation that could send […]

Read More
AI data center boom ‘stress tests’ insurers as private capital floods in
World

AI data center boom ‘stress tests’ insurers as private capital floods in

AI data centers are becoming a “stress test” for insurers as rapid technological advancements and the use of increasingly complex financial structures present a unique set of challenges and opportunities for the sector. Global spending on data centers could reach $7 trillion by 2030, according to McKinsey, and much of that spending can no longer […]

Read More
CNBC Daily Open: Trump posts expletive-filled Iran threats on Easter Sunday
World

CNBC Daily Open: Trump posts expletive-filled Iran threats on Easter Sunday

U.S. President Donald Trump arrives to speak in the Cross Hall of the White House on April 1, 2026 in Washington, DC. Alex Brandon-Pool | Getty Images News Hello, this is Dylan Butts writing to you from Singapore. Welcome to another edition of CNBC’s Daily Open. We’re now entering the sixth week of the Iran […]

Read More