Key Fed inflation rate hits 2.1% in September, as expected

Key Fed inflation rate hits 2.1% in September, as expected


Key Fed inflation rate hits 2.1% in September, as expected

Inflation increased slightly in September and moved closer to the Federal Reserve’s target, according to a Commerce Department report Thursday.

The personal consumption expenditures price index showed a seasonally adjusted 0.2% increase for the month, with the 12-month inflation rate at 2.1%, both in line with Dow Jones estimates. The Fed uses the PCE reading as its primary inflation gauge, though policymakers also follow a variety of other indicators.

Fed officials target inflation at a 2% annual rate, a level it has not achieved since February 2021. The September headline rate was down 0.2 percentage point from August.

Though the headline number showed the central bank nearing its goal, the inflation rate was at 2.7% excluding food and energy, after the so-called core measure increased 0.3% on a monthly basis. The annual rate was 0.1 percentage point higher than forecast but the same as in August.

The report comes with markets betting heavily that the Fed will cut its benchmark short-term borrowing rate when it meets next week. In September, the Fed slashed the rate by a half percentage point, a move virtually unprecedented during an economic expansion.

Policymakers have expressed confidence that inflation is heading back to target while at the same time showing concern over the state of the labor market despite most indicators showing that hiring is continuing and layoffs are low.

A separate report Thursday morning reinforced the notion that companies are mostly hanging onto their workers.

Initial filings for unemployment benefits totaled 216,000 for the week ending Oct. 26, a decrease of 12,000 from the previous period’s upwardly revised level, according to the Labor Department. The total was also below the 230,000 forecast.

Despite worries over inflation, the Commerce Department report showed income and spending held up during the month.

Personal income increased 0.3%, slightly higher than the August number and in line with expectations. Consumer spending rose 0.5%, topping the outlook by 0.1 percentage point.

In yet another data point Thursday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the employment cost index increased 0.8% in the third quarter, 0.1 percentage below forecast. On a 12-month basis, the index, which measures wages, salaries and benefits, increased 3.9%, compared to a 2.4% increase in the consumer price index, another widely followed inflation measure.

This is breaking news. Please check back for updates.



Source

Jensen Huang says Nvidia’s AI chips are now being manufactured in Arizona
World

Jensen Huang says Nvidia’s AI chips are now being manufactured in Arizona

Jensen Huang, chief executive officer of Nvidia Corp., speaks to members of the media prior to the keynote address at the Nvidia AI summit in Washington, DC, US, on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. Kent Nishimura | Bloomberg | Getty Images Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said at the company’s GTC conference on Tuesday that its Blackwell […]

Read More
Gold enters correction territory as global investors stop worrying as much about China tensions, Fed independence, AI bubble
World

Gold enters correction territory as global investors stop worrying as much about China tensions, Fed independence, AI bubble

Gold has fallen into correction territory now that investor fears around China tensions, Federal Reserve independence and an artificial intelligence bubble have been soothed. After topping $4,300 just last week, both spot gold and gold futures have made short work of dipping below $4,000. The yellow metal is still up more than 40% in 2025. […]

Read More
Ray Dalio says a risky AI market bubble is forming, but may not pop until the Fed tightens
World

Ray Dalio says a risky AI market bubble is forming, but may not pop until the Fed tightens

Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio on Tuesday warned that a bubble could be forming around megacap technology in the U.S. amid the artificial intelligence boom, but said that it may not end until the Federal Reserve reverses its current easy policies. “There’s a lot of bubble stuff going on,” Dalio told CNBC’s Sara Eisen in […]

Read More