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US producer prices surge 6.5% annually, driven by energy costs

Created at 11 Jun · 1:05 PM5 sources↑ Market-relevant4 events
IN SHORT

U.S. producer prices rose 1.1% in May, marking the largest annual gain in 3-1/2 years at 6.5%. Energy products, particularly gasoline, accounted for nearly 80% of the monthly increase, fueled by Middle East conflict tensions. Economists now expect higher PCE inflation and a continued hold on interest rates by the Federal Reserve.

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Key Numbers

6.5%annual producer price increase in May
November 2022last time producer prices rose this fast annually
1.1%monthly producer price increase in May
23.4%wholesale gasoline price surge in May
0.8%monthly core goods price increase
0.3%monthly services price increase
229,000initial jobless claims for week ended June 6
0.4%estimated monthly PCE inflation increase
3.4%projected year-on-year core PCE inflation increase
2%Federal Reserve's inflation target

Who's Involved

Labor Department
reported producer price index data
Donald Trump
President of the United States
Federal Reserve
central bank expected to hold rates unchanged
John Ryding
chief economic advisor at Brean Capital
Samuel Tombs
chief U.S. economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics
Ben Ayers
senior economist at Nationwide

↳ Why This Matters

The surge in producer prices, particularly driven by energy costs, indicates persistent inflationary pressures that could impact consumer spending and Federal Reserve policy. Higher energy prices may lead to broader inflation, potentially delaying anticipated interest rate cuts and affecting corporate profit margins.

Key facts

  • U.S. producer prices increased 1.1% in May, reaching a 6.5% annual gain.
  • Energy products accounted for nearly 80% of the monthly PPI increase.
  • Wholesale gasoline prices surged 23.4% in May.
  • Core goods prices rose 0.8% and services prices climbed 0.3% in May.
  • Initial jobless claims increased to 229,000 for the week ended June 6.

U.S. producer prices rose more than anticipated in May, marking the largest annual increase in three and a half years, driven by surging energy costs. The Producer Price Index for final demand advanced 1.1% in May, following a revised 1.1% rise in April. Annually, the PPI climbed 6.5%, the biggest gain since November 2022, compared to 5.7% in April.

Energy products, which saw a 10.7% increase, accounted for nearly 80% of the monthly PPI rise. Wholesale gasoline prices specifically jumped 23.4%. This surge in energy prices is linked to the ongoing Middle East conflict and restrictions in the Strait of Hormuz, which have strained global supply chains.

Excluding volatile energy and food components, core goods prices rose 0.8%, the largest increase since April 2022. Services prices increased by 0.3%. Economists have revised their forecasts for the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge, the PCE price index, upwards, with monthly core PCE inflation projected to rise to 0.4%.

This inflationary pressure, coupled with a resilient labor market indicated by initial jobless claims rising slightly to 229,000, reinforces expectations that the Federal Reserve will maintain its current interest rate policy. Some economists suggest the Fed might even consider a rate hike later in the year, moving away from its easing bias.

President Donald Trump commented on the situation, stating the U.S. would "hit Iran very hard tonight" and take control of its oil and gas infrastructure, potentially further impacting energy prices.

Frequently asked questions

U.S. producer prices increased by 6.5% annually in May, the largest gain since November 2022.

Energy products, particularly wholesale gasoline, accounted for nearly 80% of the monthly rise in producer prices.

The persistent inflation pressures are expected to lead the Federal Reserve to keep interest rates unchanged and potentially ditch its easing bias.

The Federal Reserve's inflation target is 2%.

What Happens Next

01The Federal Reserve is expected to announce its next policy decision next week.
02Economists will monitor upcoming PCE inflation data for further insights.

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Cadence
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How It Developed

U.S. producer prices rose 6.5% in May, the largest yearly jump since November 2022.
Wholesale gasoline prices surged 23.4% in May.
Energy products accounted for nearly 80% of the monthly PPI increase.
Core goods prices rose 0.8% and services prices climbed 0.3% in May.
Initial jobless claims increased to 229,000 for the week ended June 6.
The Producer Price Index for final demand advanced 1.1% in May.
Economists upgraded estimates for May PCE inflation to as high as 0.5%.
The Federal Reserve is expected to keep interest rates unchanged into 2027.

Sources

T1
US producer prices rose 6.5% in May on higher energy prices, largest yearly jump since November 2022AP News
T1
US producer prices rose 6.5% in May on higher energy prices, largest yearly jump since November 2022The Economic Times
T1
High energy prices drive up US producer inflation in MayReuters via PiQSuite
T1
Higher energy costs drive producer price surge https://t.co/JGKhrzo30C@axios via PiQSuite
T1
US producer inflation posts largest annual gain in 3-1/2 years as energy prices surgeReuters via PiQSuite

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