Inflation picks up again in Jun., rising at 2.7% annual rate
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24/7 Wall St. on MSN1 in 5 Americans Are Stockpiling Due to Inflation Concerns. Should You?Inflation continues to shape how Americans shop, save, and spend. Even as overall prices cool slightly, everyday essentials remain costly. That reality is pushing more people to prepare for the future by stockpiling goods—just in case.
It's a trove of information for portfolio managers and macro-watchers to gauge, and trade policy news headlines are likely to continue breaking. On July 9, President Trump announced a surprise 50% levy on copper imports, followed by a steep 50% duty on Brazil. 1 Together, it put the materials sector in focus.
Inflation moved up in June, due partially to businesses passing tariff costs onto consumers. Despite the uptick, President Trump is on the warpath for the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates, a
Still, US inflation climbed from 2.4% to 2.7%, and it is expected to rise further into the end of the year. Inflation hedges such as gold and bitcoin have rallied, and the US dollar is also strengthening on expectations of a cautious Fed cutting cycle.
6hon MSN
US inflation rose to 2.7% in June, its highest since February, driven partly by President Trump’s sweeping tariffs on imports. The spike is pushing up prices on essentials like appliances and clothing.
It hasn't been an easy start to 2025 for Jerome Powell. Unfortunately for the Fed chair, the second half of the year is likely to be even tougher.
Inflation has eased since Trump took office, meaning prices have risen at a slower pace than they had been at the end of the Biden administration. Consumer prices increased 2.4% in May compared to a year earlier, hovering near the lowest inflation since 2021.
Gold rose ahead of key U.S. inflation data due later that is expected to provide further clues on the path of Fed interest rates.
Explore why central banks are stockpiling gold and what it means for investors in an uncertain economic landscape.