Inflation is front and center this week, with the consumer price index report released on Wednesday and the producer price index on Thursday.
Here’s what Wednesday’s inflation report means for your wallet and how it could impact the Fed’s next interest rate decision.
Inflation picked up more than expected in January, returning to a 3% rate for the first time in seven months. The continued ...
The Labor Department on Wednesday released the consumer price index for January, which showed that inflation remained elevated in as the Federal Reserve considers a continued pause on rate cuts.
Inflation accelerated in January, rising 3% on an annual basis, indicating that the Federal Reserve's push to drive inflation ...
CPI report, released by the Labor Department Wednesday, showed inflation rising more than expected. Learn what this means for ...
The cost of groceries, a major pain point for most households, is expected to have risen last month, driven higher by another ...
Consumer Price Index rose 0.5%, accelerating from +0.4% in December and hotter than the +0.3% consensus, according to data released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics on Wednesday ...
The consumer price index rose 3% on the year in January 2025. Economists worry that broad disinflation is over, even as tariffs loom.
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Another month, another expected miss for inflation as it relates to the Fed's goal, with concerns aplenty about what happens from here.
Traders were on guard after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said on Tuesday that the central bank is in no hurry to lower interest rates further.