Wholesale prices unexpectedly fell 0.4% in March, showing easing inflation backdrop ahead of tariffs
Source: CNBC
Published Fri, Apr 11 2025 8:48 AM EDT Updated 37 Min Ago
Wholesale prices unexpectedly fell in March, setting up a favorable inflation backdrop as President Donald Trump began intensifying tariffs against U.S. trading partners, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday.
The producer price index, considered a leading indicator for pipeline inflation pressures, declined a seasonally adjusted 0.4% for the month, after rising 0.1% in February. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had been looking for an increase of 0.2%. It was the first decline for PPI since October 2023.
Excluding food and energy, the so-called core PPI also dropped, down 0.1% against the estimate for a 0.3% increase. The index less food, energy and trade services increased 0.1%. Stock market futures and Treasury yields both were higher following the release.
More than 70% of the slide in final demand prices came from a 0.9% tumble in goods prices, a key measure as policymakers look for inflation drivers. Most of that drop was attributed to an 11.1% slide in gasoline prices. Services prices also pulled back, falling 0.2%. Nevertheless, the indicators showed inflation still holding above the Federal Reserves 2% target.
Read more: https://www.cnbc.com/2025/04/11/wholesale-inflation-march-2024-.html
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PPI for final demand decreases 0.4% in March; goods decline 0.9%, services fall 0.2% https://bls.gov/news.release/ppi.nr0.htm
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8:32 AM · Apr 11, 2025

Ocelot II
(124,248 posts)Bernardo de La Paz
(54,741 posts)getagrip_already
(17,664 posts)They are likely ALL being doctored. Anyone who objects are being fired.
It is all hype and propaganda now.
wiggs
(8,196 posts)marble falls
(64,707 posts)JBTaurus83
(252 posts)it doesn't ever seem to trickle down to the consumer. My groceries, utlities, home insurance, and just about everything else is up dramatically year over year.
wolfie001
(4,606 posts)Higher profit margin, more consolidation. For consumers, less choices and higher prices. That's the new American way. Or the regular American way since 1980.
it seems one of the biggest issue is allowing all of these mergers, and never breaking up any of the mega corps. It is the only way to get competition and lower prices.
wolfie001
(4,606 posts)
Martin68
(25,449 posts)administration and Trump's
Bengus81
(8,689 posts)Wait until the full force of 145% tariffs hit in a month or so.