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CPI m/m (1 dp)

Forecast

0.93

Actual

0.9

Date:

2026 Apr 10 - 12:30pm
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Description

The U.S. Consumer Price Index (CPI) is a measure of the average change over time in the prices paid by urban consumers for a fixed market basket of consumer goods and services. It's a key economic indicator used to track inflation and deflation. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) calculates the CPI using a weighted average of prices for a representative basket of goods and services.

Preview Coverage

We have published our preview of the upcoming US CPI Report, found here: https://media.marketnews.com/USCPI_Prev_Apr2026_76aa0947d0.pdf Refer to the publication for: * Analyst unrounded estimates for headline and core * Detailed analyst estimates by component level * MNI analysis of the key areas to watch including the magnitude of this month's expected energy surge * Latest pertinent Fedspeak appearances and MNI policy team pieces

Apr-08 16:07

Review Coverage

Download Full Report Here: https://media.marketnews.com/US_Inflation_Insight_Apr2026_2179cf98d7.pdf March CPI undershot expectations on core measures, though the energy price shock due to the conflict in the Middle East came through clearly in a soaring headline inflation reading and more subtly across some energy-sensitive categories. Core CPI printed 0.196% M/M (vs consensus 0.27%) and 2.60% Y/Y (vs 2.7%), while headline CPI surged 0.865% M/M and 3.26% Y/Y * Underlying momentum was mixed, with recent core trends easing but still elevated. Threemonth core CPI slowed to about 2.9% annualized, while the sixmonth pace came in at ~2.3%, partly biased lower by government shutdown distortions earlier in the year. * Supercore inflation cooled meaningfully but remains a key area of concern: it slowed to 0.18% from 0.35%, down sharply from prior months, yet its three month annualized rate remains elevated around 4%+. * Housing inflation continued to moderate, supporting the Fed's longerterm disinflation narrative. * Core goods inflation softened again despite tariffrelated pressures earlier in the year. Core goods rose only ~0.1% M/M, dragged down by another decline in used car prices, while median core goods inflation posted a second consecutive soft reading following January's tariffrelated surge. * Inflation breadth widened, mainly due to energy, but longerterm dispersion signals are improving. About half of the CPI basket is now rising at 3%+ Y/Y, though some measures (Cleveland Fed median, trimmed mean) continued to trend lower on a Y/Y basis, offering a glimmer of gradual longerterm disinflation. * CPI details had mixed implications for core PCE, with downside and upside risks offsetting. Analysts trimmed March core PCE estimates slightly (median ~0.22% M/M), though volatile categories such as legal services and strong PCEweighted core goods remain key forecast risks pending PPI data. * Beyond the immediate knee-jerk reaction, pricing reverted to trade roughly around pre-data levels. In the half-hour following the release, FOMC-dated OIS effectively showed no change over the next 3 meetings and a cumulative 9bp of cuts through year-end.

Apr-10 19:57

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