Annual inflation ticked up and underlying price pressures remained strong last month.
The Labor Department said Wednesday that the consumer price index rose 3.5% in March.
Investors and economists have been looking forward to Wednesday’s release with unusually high interest—even by the standards of CPI reports, which are always a highlight of the monthly economic calendar.
Recent data showed inflation running higher than expected in January and February, an unwelcome break from months of encouraging reports that showed a marked decline in the pace of price increases.
Still, Federal Reserve officials haven’t reacted as strongly to those firmer readings as they might have, describing them as bumps on the road to their 2% inflation target that don’t derail plans to cut interest rates this year.
That has put extra focus on the March CPI reading. Many analysts have said that a third consecutive month of disappointing inflation data could warrant a bigger shift in the Fed’s inflation and policy outlook.
Investors started the year expecting more rate cuts than the Fed but have changed their views in response to both the inflation reports and solid economic activity data.
Last month, a narrow majority of Fed officials thought at least three cuts would be warranted this year if inflation continued to decline. Interest-rate futures suggest that investors generally now have the same forecast—after expecting six cuts coming into the year. Some are going further, betting that the Fed will cut rates just once or…
Mortgage rates, for example, are closely linked to yields on longer-term U.S. government bonds, which have climbed this year as investors have dialed back their bets on Fed rate cuts.
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