Consumer prices rose sharply in January, underscoring why the Federal Reserve is in “no hurry," in the words of its chairman, to cut U.S. interest rates again. The consumer-price index rose a stiff 0.
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Housing, which has been one of the more persistent inflation factors, continues to be on a bumpy cooling path. The consumer ...
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U.S. consumer prices increased more than expected in January, reinforcing the Federal Reserve's message that it was in no ...
The Consumer Price Index rose 0.5%, while a measure that strips out energy and food rose 0.4%, the Labor Department said on ...
The cost of food and energy continued to climb in January, hitting 3% for the first time since June 2024, pushing the cost of living higher for Americans.
Inflation accelerated in January, with the consumer price index rising 3% year over year, above economists' expectations.
US economists are looking for monthly headline CPI at 0.31%, which would keep the year-on-year rate at 2.9%. Core CPI is ...
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It's less than half an hour to the January consumer-price-index reading, and investors should be aware of the data's tendency to run a little hotter than expected as the new year gets under way. The ...
Bitcoin's negative Coinbase premium signals selling pressure with US traders eyeing CPI data and inflation trends impacting ...