The Producer Price Index (PPI) for final demand rose 0.9% in July, seasonally adjusted, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Wednesday. This marked a sharp acceleration from no change in June and a 0.4% rise in May. On a year-over-year basis, PPI advanced 3.3% — the largest annual gain since February 2025’s 3.4% and well above both consensus expectations of 2.5% and June’s 2.4%.
The July increase was broad-based, with more than three-quarters of the gain driven by final demand services, which jumped 1.1%. Prices for final demand goods also climbed 0.7%. Notably, the index for final demand less foods, energy, and trade services — a key gauge of underlying pipeline inflation — rose 0.6% in July, the steepest monthly rise since March 2022’s 0.9% increase. Core PPI was up 3.7% year-over-year, outpacing June’s 2.6% and far exceeding the 2.9% consensus.
While the PPI tends to receive less attention than the Consumer Price Index (CPI), it offers critical insight into upstream cost pressures that can flow into consumer prices. These latest readings, when combined with this week’s CPI data, will feed into the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge — the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index — due later this month.
Before the PPI release, markets were pricing in near certainty of a September rate cut, buoyed by CPI readings that came in broadly in line with expectations. However, the hotter-than-expected PPI has slightly tempered those expectations. The data suggest that producer-level inflation pressures remain sticky, potentially complicating the Fed’s easing path.
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