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February inflation surprises with modest uptick, but core pressures ease


Updated at 8:56 AM EDT

U.S. inflation pressures quickened modestly last month, but core price pressures continued to ease, suggesting the broader trajectory is moving slowly toward the Federal Reserve’s 2% target over the coming months.

The headline consumer price index for February was pegged by the Commerce Department at 3.2%, rising from the prior month’s tally of 3.1% and coming in ahead of Wall Street’s 3.1% consensus forecast.

On a monthly basis, inflation edged 0.4% higher, faster than the 0.3% gain in January but matching Wall Street’s 0.4% forecast.

So-called core inflation, which strips out volatile components like food and energy, eased to 3.8%, the lowest in more two years but higher than Wall Street’s 3.7% forecast. The monthly reading of 0.4% also topped Wall Street forecasts and matched the January reading.

The Fed tracks core inflation pressures as part of its price-stability mandate, and the year-on-year gains remain nearly double its preferred target of 2%.

U.S. stocks were extended gains following the data release, with futures tied to the S&P 500 indicating an opening bell gain of 126 points while those tied to the Dow suggest an 86 point advance. The Nasdaq is called 141 points higher

Benchmark 10-year Treasury note yields rose 1 basis point following the data release to change hands at 4.104% while 2-year notes were pegged at 4.542%, around 1 basis point lower from prior to the data release.

More Economy:

  • Analysts revamp interest rate targets following Fed meeting
  • Bond markets’ reaction to key data could be great for stocks
  • Jobs report shocker: 353,000 hires crush forecasts, stokes inflation fears

Last week, the Labor Department said 275,000 new jobs were created last month. The larger-than-expected overall tally spooked investors concerned about the impact of rising wages on inflation.

However, the February jobs report also noted that average hourly earnings growth eased by a slower-than-expected 0.1%, the smallest increase since last autumn. The year-on-year gain slowed to 4.3% from 4.6%, a figure that also fell inside Wall Street forecasts and should soothe concern about spiraling wage gains.

Meanwhile, the the labor-force-participation rate both held at 62.5% while the headline unemployment rate edged higher to 3.9%.

CME Group’s FedWatch has long discounted the chances of a Fed rate move next week in Washington. It now pegs the chances of a quarter-percentage-point cut in June at around 60%.

Related: Veteran fund manager picks favorite stocks for 2024




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