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Inflation Cools More Than Expected. What Does It Mean for Interest Rates and the Stock Market?

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New data shows inflation is showing signs of cooling, though prices remain elevated starkly above levels the Federal Reserve prefers to see.

In March, inflation rose 5% from the year prior, the U.S. Labor Department reported Wednesday, coming in a hair lower than the 5.1% prediction from many financial firms. Compared to the month before, prices increased 0.1%.

"This number was a little bit better than what markets were thinking,” Jason Furman, an economics professor at Harvard University, said during a panel hosted by the Brookings Institution Wednesday.

Inflation continues to fall from its peak of 9.1% last summer, and the March report belies a big dip in inflation compared to February’s report, which pegged annual price growth at 6%. However, a closer look suggests it may be too soon to celebrate. Furman noted that the big picture isn’t as cheery when it comes to core inflation.

So-called “core inflation” — the Fed’s preferred measure of consumer prices that strips out the volatile costs of energy and food — has outpaced the overall inflation rate for the first time since 2020. In March, the annual core inflation rate was 5.6%, compared to the headline inflation rate of 5%.

A key reason for this switch is that the overall inflation rate, which includes energy prices, is being compared to March 2022, just after Russia invaded Ukraine, sending oil prices through the roof. But the new data still has major implications for the U.S. central banking system's battle to bring down prices.

Where prices are rising and falling

What’s next

While headline inflation came in slightly cooler than expected, Wall Street is largely expecting the Fed to continue its fight against inflation.

“All that says to me is that the Fed still has more to do,” Edelberg said. “And that’s OK. That’s how monetary policy works.”

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