Did prices jump in January? Inflation report will provide latest update
on consumer costs
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[February 12, 2025] By
CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
WASHINGTON (AP) — Inflation likely stayed elevated last month in the
latest sign that consumer price growth has gotten stuck after declining
for much of last year.
On Wednesday the Labor Department is expected to report that in January
the consumer price index rose 2.9% from a year ago, according to
economists surveyed by FactSet. If accurate, it would be unchanged from
December and up from a 3 1/2 year low of 2.4% in September.
Wednesday's inflation report will be closely watched to see if a recent
trend that has bedeviled the inflation-fighters at the Federal Reserve
will continue: In January 2024, prices jumped sharply in part because
many companies raise prices at the beginning of each year. With
inflation still elevated, some of those increases have been larger than
usual.
Most economists expect the effect will be more muted this time —
consumers are more price-sensitive than a year ago — but if it happens
again, inflation could tick higher.
Either way, inflation's recent uptick is a major reason the Federal
Reserve has paused its interest rate cuts, after implementing three of
them last year. On Tuesday, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said “we do not need
to be in a hurry” to implement further reductions in testimony to the
Senate Banking Committee.
The Fed's benchmark rate is now about 4.3%, down from a two-decade high
of 5.3% in August.
Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, core consumer prices
are forecast to have risen 3.2% from a year earlier, according to
FactSet, the same as the previous month. The Fed closely watches core
prices because they typically provide a better sense of where inflation
is headed.
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 The cost of new and used cars likely
fell last month, economists forecast, along with clothing prices,
holding down inflation.
Yet the cost of groceries, a major pain point for most households,
is expected to have risen last month, driven higher by another jump
in egg prices. An avain flu epidemic has forced egg breeders to cull
their flocks by millions of chickens. Some store chains are limiting
purchases and some restaurants are tacking on surcharges for egg
dishes.
Most Fed officials — and economists in the private sector — expect
inflation will resume its decline in the coming months. Apartment
rental cost growth is cooling and other sources of inflation, such
as sharp increases in car insurance prices, are expected to grow
more slowly.
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Still, the Trump administration's tariff policy could lift prices in
the coming months. Trump on Monday imposed 25% taxes on steel and
aluminum imports, and has pledged to impose more tariffs. Economists
at Goldman Sachs forecast that yearly core inflation would fall
almost a full percentage point, to 2.3%, by the end of this year,
absent any import duties. But they expect tariffs will raise
end-of-year inflation to 2.7%.
On Tuesday, Fed Chair Powell acknowledged that higher tariffs could
lift inflation and limit the central bank's ability to cut rates,
calling it “a possible outcome.”
But he emphasized that it would depend on how many imports are hit
with tariffs and for how long.
“In some cases it doesn’t reach the consumer much, and in some cases
it does,” Powell said. “And it really does depend on facts that we
we haven’t seen yet.”
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