US producer prices rise modest 2.6% in May with inflationary pressures
still mild
[June 13, 2025] By
PAUL WISEMAN
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. wholesale prices rose modestly last month from a
year earlier, another sign that inflationary pressures remain mild.
The Labor Department reported Thursday that its producer price index —
which measures inflation before it its consumers — rose 2.6% in May
2024. Producer prices rose 0.1% from April to May after dropping 0.2%
the month before.
Excluding volatile food and energy prices, wholesale costs were up 0.1%
from April and 3% from May 2024.
The readings were slightly lower than economists had forecast.
Wholesale energy prices were unchanged, although gasoline prices rose
1.6% from April after falling the month before. Food prices at the
wholesale level ticked up 0.1% after dropping 0.9% in April. Egg prices,
volatile because of the bird flu, rose 1.4% following 39.3% drop in
April; they are up 125% from May 2024.

The report came out a day after the Labor Department said that consumer
prices rose a modest 0.1% last month from April and 2.4% from a year
earlier.
Since returning to office, President Donald Trump has rolled out 10%
tariffs on nearly every country in the world as well as specific levies
on steel, aluminum and autos. Importers in the United States pay the
taxes and pass them along to consumers via higher prices when they can.
For that reason, economists expect inflation to pick up later this year.
So far, his tariffs don’t seem to have had much of an impact on prices
overall.
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 Wholesale prices can offer an early
look at where consumer inflation might be headed. Economists also
watch it because some of its components, notably health care and
financial services, flow into the Federal Reserve’s preferred
inflation gauge — the personal consumption expenditures, or PCE,
index.
Inflation began to flare up for the first time in decades in 2021,
as the economy roared back with unexpected strength from COVID-19
lockdowns. That prompted the Fed to raise its benchmark interest
rate 11 times in 2022 and 2023. The higher borrowing costs helped
bring inflation down from the peaks it reached in 2022, and last
year the Fed felt comfortable enough with the progress to cut rates
three times.
But it has turned cautious this year while it waits to see the
inflationary impact of Trump’s trade policies. The central bank is
expected to leave rates unchanged at its meeting next Tuesday and
Wednesday.
“There is no incentive for the (Fed) to debate hiking rates in
today’s figures,” Carl Weinberg, chief economist at High Frequency
Economics, wrote. "In fact, if the Fed did not know that tariff
increases were in the pipeline, it might even contemplate cutting
rates.''
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