US inflation got worse with rising groceries and gasoline prices
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[February 13, 2025] By
CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. inflation accelerated last month as the cost of
groceries, gasoline and rents rose, a disappointment for families and
businesses struggling with higher costs and likely underscoring the
Federal Reserve's resolve to delay further interest rate cuts.
The consumer price index increased 3% in January from a year ago,
Wednesday’s report from the Labor Department showed, up from 2.9% the
previous month. It has increased from a 3 1/2 year low of 2.4% in
September.
The new data shows that inflation has remained stubbornly above the
Fed's 2% target for roughly the past six months after it fell steadily
for about a year and a half. Elevated prices turned into a major
political hurdle for former President Joe Biden. President Donald Trump
pledged to reduce prices on “Day 1" if elected, though most economists
worry that his many proposed tariffs could at least temporarily increase
costs.
The unexpected boost in inflation could dampen some of the business
enthusiasm that arose after Trump's election on promises to reduce
regulation and cut taxes. The Dow fell 400 points in mid-day trading
Wednesday. Bond yields rose, a sign traders expect inflation and
interest rates to remain high.
“We're really not making progress on inflation right now,” Sarah House,
senior economist at Wells Fargo. “This just extends the Fed's hold.”
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Inflation often jumps in January as many companies raise their prices at
the beginning of the year, though the government’s seasonal adjustment
process is supposed to filter out those effects.
Yet House said inflation's stubbornness wasn't just a one-month blip.
Consumers — particularly wealthier ones — are still spending at a robust
pace, giving many companies less reason to hold down prices. And much of
the decline in inflation in 2023 and early last year stemmed from
supply-chain improvements, but that trend has mostly played out.
Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, core consumer prices
rose 3.3% in January compared with a year ago, up from 3.2% in December.
Economists closely watch core prices because they can provide a better
read of inflation's future path.
Inflation also worsened on a monthly basis, with prices jumping 0.5% in
January from December, the largest increase since August 2023. Core
prices climbed 0.4% last month, the most since March 2024.
Grocery prices climbed 0.5% just in January, pushed higher by a 15.2%
surge in egg prices, the biggest monthly increase since June of 2015.
Egg prices have soared 53% compared with a year ago.
An avian flu epidemic has forced egg producers to cull from their flocks
about 40 million birds in December and January. Stores have imposed
limits on egg purchases and restaurants have placed surcharges on egg
dishes.
The cost of car insurance continues to rise, and picked up 2% just from
December to January. Hotel prices rose 1.4% last month, while the cost
of a gallon of gas moved up 1.8%.
Trump’s tariffs are making life more complicated for Phil Hannon, vice
president of operations at Abt, a consumer electronics store in
Glenview, Illinois. Roughly 60% of Abt’s sales are appliances, big and
small. The rest are in consumer electronics like TVs and computers, and
furniture.
Hannon expects to raise prices between 3% and 15% as soon as March to
offset the impact of tariffs, including the steel and aluminum duties.
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An empty shelf of free range eggs is seen at a Safeway, Monday, Jan.
27, 2025, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
 He’s received notices from vendors
over the past two weeks warning about eventual price increases,
though they’re not specific. To get ahead of the cost increases,
Hannon has been locking in orders from suppliers for up to 90 days.
Hannon said that many customers are already asking about price
increases and when the tariffs are coming. He started seeing a
noticeable pickup of customers ordering products like washing
machines this month to get ahead of the tariffs.
Separately, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said Wednesday in testimony
before the House Financial Services Committee that the Fed “has made
great progress” on inflation “but we're not quite there yet."
"Today's inflation print ... says the same thing," he added. As a
result, the Fed wants to keep rates “restrictive for now," he said.
At its current level, the Fed's key rate is restricting borrowing
and spending by consumers and businesses, Powell has said.
With inflation down significantly from its 9.1% peak in June 2022,
the Fed cut its rate to about 4.3% in its final three meetings last
year. It raised its benchmark rate in 2022 and 2023 to a two-decade
high of 5.3% to combat inflation.
The Fed’s rate typically influences other borrowing costs for
everything from mortgages to credit cards.
Early Wednesday, Trump said on social media that interest rates
should be lowered, “something which would go hand in hand with
upcoming Tariffs!!!” Yet the tick up in consumer prices makes it
less likely the Fed will cut rates anytime soon.
One sign of concern for economists is that goods prices, excluding
food and energy, rose 0.3% in January from the previous month.
Prices for cars, furniture, and appliances had been flat or falling
after supply-chain kinks stemming from the pandemic were resolved.
Yet now those prices have ticked up even before tariffs have been
launched.
Trump has imposed 25% tariffs on steel and aluminum, which could
push the cost of cars, appliances, and industrial machinery higher.
He also said earlier this week he would impose “reciprocal tariffs”
on countries that have high duties on U.S. goods.
“There’s just a stew of uncertainty that if it lasts and lingers
over the next couple months, you could see business confidence come
down,” Anthony Saglimbene, chief market strategist at Ameriprise,
said. That could reduce hiring and investment, he said.
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On Tuesday, 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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AP Retail Writer Anne D'Innocenzio contributed to this report from
New York.
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