Key facts
- The Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge reached a three-year high in May.
- Consumer prices increased 4.1% in May compared to the previous year.
- Gas prices and demand for AI-related semiconductors were key drivers of the inflation surge.
- Core inflation, excluding volatile energy and food, saw its largest annual increase since October 2023.
- Federal Reserve officials are focused on returning inflation to the 2% target.
- Some economists now forecast potential interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve.
The Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge, the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index, climbed to a three-year high in May, signaling persistent affordability challenges. The Commerce Department reported that consumer prices rose 4.1% annually, the steepest increase since April 2023, with monthly inflation holding steady at 0.4%.
Rising gasoline prices and increased demand for semiconductors, driven by the AI buildout, were primary contributors to the surge. Core prices, which exclude volatile energy and food components, also saw an uptick, rising 3.4% year-over-year, the highest level since October 2023.
This inflationary pressure has led the Federal Reserve to maintain its key interest rate unchanged throughout the year, a shift from earlier expectations of rate cuts. Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh recently reiterated the central bank's commitment to bringing inflation back to its 2% target. However, some economists now anticipate that the Fed might even consider raising interest rates later this year, a prospect that has contributed to a recent downturn in stock prices.