Producer prices shot up 6%, adding pressure on companies to hike prices
for struggling customers
[May 14, 2026] By
PAUL WISEMAN
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. wholesale inflation came in hot last month.
Producer prices rose 6% from a year earlier, the highest point in more
than three years, as the Iran war pushes up energy prices and
intensifies pressure on companies to pass along their rising costs to
consumers.
The Labor Department reported Wednesday that its producer price index —
which tracks inflation before it hits consumers — shot up 1.4% in April,
the biggest monthly gain in more than four years.
Energy prices climbed 7.8% from March to April and 22.7% from a year
earlier. Gasoline soared 15.6% from March and diesel, the dominant fuel
used in shipping, jumped 12.6%.
Gasoline prices, which have already become painful for many Americans,
rose again overnight to a national average of $4.51 per gallon,
according to motor club AAA.
Excluding volatile food and energy costs, so-called core producer prices
rose 1% from March and 5.2% from April 2025.
All of the numbers released Wednesday caught economists off guard and
altered the dynamic at the U.S. Federal Reserve and its fight against
inflation.
Prices are rising at a time when Americans are already frustrated by the
high cost of living. Affordability is likely to be a key issue when
voters go to the polls Nov. 3 to determine whether President Donald
Trump’s Republican Party maintains control of the U.S. Senate and House
of Representatives.

“This report will set off alarm bells at the Fed and add fuel to the
political conversation about affordability,″ wrote Carl Weinberg, chief
economist at High Frequency Economics. “The results are so far above
expectations that this update will set off alarm bells in the financial
markets, too.″
After the United States and Israel attacked Iran on Feb. 28, Tehran
closed off access to the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the
world’s oil and liquefied natural gas passes.
The oil shock shows no sign of letting up. The International Energy
Agency warned Wednesday that the “mounting supply losses from the Strait
of Hormuz are depleting global oil inventories at a record pace.’’ Since
February, global oil supplies have been reduced by 12.8 million barrels
a day in what the IEA called “an unprecedented supply shock.’’
Wednesday’s report on producer prices showed a big uptick in shipping
costs. The wholesale cost of truck transportation of freight shot up
more than 8% from March and air freight rose 3.6% for the month.

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A customer picks up scallions for sale in the produce section of a
grocery store on Monday, May 11, 2026, in Portland, Ore. (AP
Photo/Jenny Kane)
 “Diesel fuel is also crucial for
food prices, as it powers farm equipment along with commercial
shipping and trucking,” wrote Grace Zwemmer, US Economist at Oxford
Economics. “Food prices rose by a muted 0.2% in April, much stronger
than the 0.6% decline seen in March, and it’s possible they will
face upward pressure from higher fuel prices the longer the war
persists.”
Wholesale prices can offer an early look at where prices for
consumers may be headed.
Already this week, the Labor Department said that its closely
watched consumer price index jumped 3.8% last month from April 2025
— the biggest year-over-year increase in more than three years. That
has begun to appear in everything from what Americans pay for air
travel, both tickets and baggage fees, to soap and toothpaste.
Walmart, a company famous for its intense focus on low prices,
already announced rare price hikes last year as Trump's tariffs were
rolled out, and the rising costs may intensify pressure to do so
again. It is not alone.
Whirlpool, which makes KitchenAid and Maytag appliances, reported
this month that its revenue dropped nearly 10% in its most recent
quarter and said that the war has caused a “recession-level industry
decline″ that has undermined consumer confidence. It had announced a
10% price hike in April, its largest in a decade, and said another
4% price increase is coming in July.
The cost of credit, which had been in decline, has been frozen in
place.
Before the Iran war, the Fed had been expected to cut its benchmark
interest rate in 2026. But it has turned cautious as it waits to see
how long the conflict lasts and whether higher energy prices spill
over into other products and cause a broader inflationary outbreak.
Trump has attacked the Fed and its outgoing chair, Jerome Powell,
for refusing to slash rates to boost the economy. Kevin Warsh, the
president’s hand-picked choice to succeed Powell, was confirmed by
the Senate Wednesday, but it’s unclear whether Warsh would pursue
lower rates given the uncertainty caused by the war — or whether he
could persuade his colleagues on the Fed’s rate-setting committee to
go along if he tried.
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