US Core CPI Tumbles To Slowest In 4 Years (Before Iran-Triggered Oil Spike)
While all attention is currently on Iran (and the energy impact of actions overseas), today’s CPI (for February) should not be affected by the recent surge in WTI (but March’s data definitely will be)…
Source: Bloomberg
Headline CPI rose 0.3% MoM (as expected), lifting prices by 2.4% YoY (unchanged from the prior month at the lowest since May 2025)…
Source: Bloomberg
The disinflation trend is still your friend as the terrors of tariff-flation remain non-evident, much to the disappointment of establishment economists.
Core Services remain the biggest driver of CPI with Core Goods relatvely unmoved (and Energy starting to pick up)…
Core CPI also met expectations with a +0.2% MoM move, leaving prices up 2.45% YoY – the lowest since March 2021
Source: Bloomberg
Core CPI Services are also the main driver of Core CPI (but are seeing significant disinflation)…
SuperCore CPI (Services ex-Shelter) lifted very modestly on a YoY basis with Medical Care Services the biggest driver…
While typically, a hot (or cold) CPI would drive stocks and bonds dramatically, we remain beholden to the slings and arrows of outrageous crude oil price fortune (for now) with rate-cut odds remaining near recent (hawkish) cycle lows.
Interestingly Fuel Oil costs soared MoM…
Both Goods and Services costs are signaling disinflation (ahead of March’s potentially explosive moves)…
The question is – how long will the impact of soaring energy costs impact CPI?
Is it different this time?
The policy sensitive two-year yield was around 1.5 basis points higher at 3.605% after the report, while swaps linked to Fed meeting dates implied traders see 34 basis points of easing this year, versus around 35 basis points earlier in the session. The market continues to price the first full quarter-point reduction arriving in September or October.
Longer-dated Treasuries were under more pressure, with the yield on 10-year notes two basis points higher at 4.18%. Later in New York, Treasury will sell $39 billion of the current 10-year issue.
Tyler Durden
Wed, 03/11/2026 – 08:39