Inflation heated up more than expected in January, as prices for groceries, housing and energy all rose for Americans in early 2025, complicating President Donald Trump’s agenda.
By Colby Smith Getting inflation under control since the worst surge in decades has been a bumpy process in recent months. New data on Friday showed a little progress, but also an unexpected ...
Gold prices dipped on Monday as profit-taking countered support from safe-haven demand fuelled by geopolitical uncertainty, ...
The war is over. Not the war in Ukraine or Gaza — I mean the war on inflation. Shoppers, understandably, are still freaking out in the grocery aisles, most recently over egg prices. Meanwhile ...
By Colby Smith Alan Rappeport and Ana Swanson Hot inflation has raised the stakes of President Trump’s plans to escalate his use of tariffs on the country’s biggest trading partners ...
Euro-area inflation unexpectedly accelerated in January ... (Updates with comments from ECB’s Cipollone in 18th paragraph.) ...
Federal Reserve officials at a meeting last month pointed to rising risks that inflation could worsen, a key reason they kept their benchmark interest rate unchanged. According to minutes of the ...
U.S. inflation accelerated last month as the cost of groceries, gas and used cars rose, a trend that probably will underscore the Fed’s resolve to delay interest rate cuts.
In the week ahead key updates on inflation, with fresh readings on the Producer Price Index (PPI) and Consumer Price Index (CPI), will be in focus as investors look for any clues on how tariffs ...
The Fed has brought inflation down to 2.5%, from high as 7.2%, while the labor market has remained strong so far. With so much progress in the battle against inflation through last summer ...