US Producer Prices Come in Tame as Pipeline Pressures Abate

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Workers sand metal doors at a manufacturing facility in Sacramento, California.Workers sand metal doors at a manufacturing facility in Sacramento, California. Photo by David Paul Morris /Bloomberg

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(Bloomberg) — An underlying gauge of US producer price inflation was softer than expected in June, suggesting pressures earlier in the pipeline were abating before the latest flare-up in the Iran war.

Financial Post

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The producer price index excluding food and energy increased 4.7% from a year earlier, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data out Wednesday, below the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey. Overall PPI inflation slowed in large part due to a 12% drop in gasoline prices.

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The report showed broad-based cooling in several key categories that had been boosted in recent months by the fallout from the war. That likely gives the Federal Reserve more room to postpone an interest-rate increase — especially after a separate report Tuesday showed consumer prices were also tame in June. However, with the Middle East conflict heating up again, the reprieve may prove short-lived.

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US stock index futures rose and Treasury yields fell as investors scaled back bets on a Fed rate hike in July after the report.

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Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh, in testimony before Congress on Tuesday, warned against declaring “mission accomplished” following the favorable report on consumer prices.

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Energy prices fell 6.4% in June from the prior month, according to Wednesday’s figures, while transportation and warehousing prices also declined. Even so, trucking freight rates have been elevated due to rising fuel costs and a shrinking pool of drivers amid President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.

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Food prices, meanwhile, fell for the first time in three months. They have generally been climbing this year thanks to a combination of factors including bad weather, the war and tariffs.

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Several components of the PPI are also of particular interest to the Fed because they feed into its preferred inflation gauge, the personal consumption expenditures price index. Those categories were mixed: Airfares jumped 1.9%, but portfolio management fees rose at a much slower pace than in May.

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The Bureau of Economic Analysis is scheduled to release June PCE price data, along with income and spending figures, on July 30.

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What Bloomberg Economics Says…

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“With the data now in hand, we calculate that PCE inflation will be firmer than June’s soft CPI report but likely still cool enough to keep the Fed on hold at its next few meetings.”

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— Troy Durie

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A measure of inflation pressures earlier in the production process — prices of processed goods for intermediate demand excluding food and energy — rose 0.6%, the least since the start of the year. Prices of plastic resins and materials, a key input for a vast array of consumer goods, fell for the first time in 2026.

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The report also showed some cooling in two other emerging sources of inflation pressures this year: data centers and defense production. The prices of electronic components and accessories fell for a second month, and prices associated with government purchases for defense declined 2.2%.

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