Inflation picked up in June, a sign that President Donald Trump’s tariffs are beginning to push up costs of appliances, furniture, clothing and other everyday goods across the economy.
Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, rose 2.9 percent from a year earlier, which was also slightly hotter than the prior month’s increase. If monthly gains continue, annual rates could edge toward 4 percent by the end of the year, economists say.
The price increases in June were broad-based, affecting imports such as cosmetics, shoes and toys, as well as services like medical care, car insurance and education. Meanwhile, vehicle prices and airfares fell, in part because of dampened demand.
Inflation data so far has mostly defied concerns that Trump’s tariffs would ignite price increases, surprising analysts who had braced for higher inflation and weaker hiring amid the unpredictable trade moves.
Economists say the full impact of Trump’s trade policy will take time to materialize. Big companies, in particular, seem to have prepared well by stocking inventories ahead of the tariffs. Many also found alternative suppliers, improved productivity, and pressured wholesalers and distributors to absorb some of the extra costs. A fresh round of threatened tariffs scheduled to take effect Aug. 1 could cloud the outlook and prompt the Federal Reserve to extend its wait-and-see approach to interest rates.
“This CPI print puts the Fed in a tight corner, with inflation drifting away from its target as the effects of tariffs take hold,” Eswar Prasad, an economics professor at Cornell University, wrote in an email.
Still, he noted, many businesses have so far held off on major price increases while they waited to see whether the Trump administration pulled back on its trade threats. But if tariffs remain high, economists expect to see real damage over time, in the form of both higher prices and slower job growth.
“The pass through of tariffs into domestic prices is likely to intensify over time,” Prasad said.
The White House has repeatedly highlighted the monthly data to argue that Trump is beating inflation, while simultaneously calling on the Fed to lower interest rates to boost economic activity. After lowering rates by a full percentage point between September and December, the Fed has left rates unchanged at a range of 4.25 percent to 4.5 percent.
Despite near-daily pressure from Trump and his top officials, the Fed is unlikely to lower rates this month at its next scheduled meeting.
“We’re simply taking some time,” Fed Chair Jerome H. Powell said recently at a conference in Portugal. “As long as the U.S. economy is in solid shape, we think the prudent thing to do is wait and learn more and see what those effects might be.”
Here are five key takeaways from the June consumer price index report, released Tuesday. Click here for our TOPLive blog:
- Overall CPI rose 0.3%, as expected, the biggest monthly advance since January. That brought the year-on-year increase to 2.7%, marking an acceleration from 2.4% in May. Higher food and energy prices helped drive the acceleration.
- Stripping out food and energy, the core CPI rose 0.2% on a rounded basis, undershooting the median forecast for a fifth straight month. The 12-month increase came in at 2.9%, matching expectations and marking an uptick from the 2.8% pace sustained over the previous three months.
- Core inflation was held down by declines in both new and used vehicle prices, along with airfares and lodging costs. Housing prices were also tame relative to the years of high inflation, with shelter up 0.2% every month. Effects of tariff increases were visible in several categories, with household furnishings up 1%, for the biggest rise since January 2022; video and audio products up 1.1% — the most since February last year; and toy prices climbing 1.8% on the month, the most since April 2021.
- With new, higher tariff rates threatened to kick in starting in August, economists said the June inflation report was unlikely to push the Federal Reserve into cutting interest rates sooner rather than later. Interest-rate futures continued to show odds-on chances of the Fed resuming rate cuts in September.
- Stock futures added to gains after the release, while two-year Treasury yields surrendered a modest rise. Two-year notes yielded about 3.90% as of 9:23 a.m. in New York, and contracts on the S&P 500 were up about 0.5%. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed.