A reading on the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge released Friday for January, before the Iran war, showed ...
Data on consumer prices in February will inform the Federal Reserve’s deliberations over interest rates next week.
Annual inflation was unchanged last month at 2.4%, according to the latest Consumer Price Index, released Wednesday.
Consumer inflation in the United States remained stable at 2.4 percent in February, official data showed Wednesday, with price shocks from the US-Israel war on Iran yet to be reflected ...
Inflation stayed stubbornly elevated last month as gas prices rose in a snapshot of what consumer prices looked like before ...
The US Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge came in slightly lower than expected in January, registering 2.8 percent ...
While February’s Consumer Price Index report shows only modest price pressures, inflationary risks are rising again as the conflict in the Middle East drags on.
With crude oil briefly nearing $120 per barrel on Monday before giving up gains, the conflict is poised to reignite inflationary pressures around the world, including for vulnerable economies such as ...
The data may reveal less than usual about inflation’s path as it does not account for gas and oil price surges sparked by the Iran war in early March.
Inflation was steady in February, right before the Iran war rattled global energy markets and sent prices skyrocketing.