DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Producer prices rose by a surprisingly hot 3.4% last month, the most in a year

March 18, 2026
in News
Producer prices rose by a surprisingly hot 3.4% last month, the most in a year

Wholesale prices came in hotter than expected in February.

The Labor Department reported Wednesday that its producer price index — which measures inflation before it hits consumers — rose 0.7% from January, and 3.4% from February 2025. The year-over-year increase was the most since February 2025.

The gains, driven partly by an sharp increase in food prices from January to February, were bigger than economists had forecast, and they occurred before the U.S. and Israel attack on Iran pushed energy prices sharply higher.

“These are some mighty big increases, adding fuel to the political conversation about affordability,” wrote Carl B. Weinberg, the chief economist at High Frequency Economics. “And of course, energy prices will spike higher in the March report, thanks to the war in Iran and the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.”

Oil prices have surged nearly 50% since the Iran war began, and gasoline prices are following close behind.

The average price for a gallon of gasoline in the U.S. spiked again overnight, reaching $3.84. A gallon of gas last month, before the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran, was well under $3. Diesel prices, used heavily in transportation, are rising even faster.

Excluding volatile food and energy prices, so-called core wholesale prices rose 0.5% from January, down from a 0.8% gain the month before but more than twice what economists had expected. Compared with a year earlier, core prices rose 3.9%, the biggest jump since January 2025.

Food prices rose 2.4% from January, led by a 49% surge in vegetable prices and a 10% increase in fruit prices. Still, food prices were down from a year earlier.

The newest economic indicator arrived on the same day that policymakers at the Federal Reserve are meeting in Washington to decide what to do about the nation’s benchmark interest rate. The rate was cut three times last year with inflation seemingly slowing, but the Fed has since stopped cutting — and it’s expected to announce Wednesday that it’s done so again.

The Fed is waiting to see whether inflationary pressures ease and whether the slumping U.S. job market needs help from lower borrowing costs. The war with Iran has clouded the inflation picture by driving up energy prices, and investors took note of the newest figures on inflation early Wednesday.

The S&P 500, the Dow and the Nasdaq composite all reversed course and went negative before the opening bell.

Last week, the government issued two reports showing that inflation at the consumer level remained above the Fed’s 2% target before the U.S. and Israel attacked on Iran.

The Labor Department reported a week ago that consumer prices rose 2.4% last month compared to February 2025. And the Commerce Department said Friday that the Fed’s favored inflation measure — the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index — was up 2.8% in January from a year earlier. Core PCE prices rose 3.1%, biggest increase in nearly two years.

Wiseman writes for the Associated Press.

The post Producer prices rose by a surprisingly hot 3.4% last month, the most in a year appeared first on Los Angeles Times.

An AI agent destroyed this coder’s entire database. He’s not the only one with a horror story.
News

An AI agent destroyed this coder’s entire database. He’s not the only one with a horror story.

by Fortune
March 18, 2026

Engineer Alexey Grigorev was using Claude Code—a popular Anthropic tool that helps developers write and run code—to update a new ...

Read more
News

Who’s In Charge of Vaccines Now?

March 18, 2026
News

ICE nabs Dreamer visiting his premature baby in intensive care: report

March 18, 2026
News

Why Does Cory Booker Think This Time Will Be Different?

March 18, 2026
News

Japan’s leader heads to Washington for a visit complicated by the Iran war fallout

March 18, 2026
“A bend in the trajectory”: U.S. data center development has hit snags because the power grid is approaching its limits to support them 

“A bend in the trajectory”: U.S. data center development has hit snags because the power grid is approaching its limits to support them 

March 18, 2026
Senate ‘desperate’ to pass bill Trump bragged of at SOTU —  but he’s lost interest: report

Senate ‘desperate’ to pass bill Trump bragged of at SOTU —  but he’s lost interest: report

March 18, 2026
Amy Winehouse’s ex-husband denies ‘responsibility’ for singer’s death in rare interview

Amy Winehouse’s ex-husband denies ‘responsibility’ for singer’s death in rare interview

March 18, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026