Gas prices have done what tariffs alone could not. They pushed the Fed's preferred inflation gauge to a three-year high.
And Americans are running out of cushion.
Inflation Is Climbing, Spending Isn't
The Personal Consumption Expenditures price index, the Fed's preferred inflation read, jumped to 3.8% in April from 3.5% in March. That's the highest reading since 2023.
Strip out food and energy and core PCE sits at 3.3% year over year, also moving the wrong way.
Spending technically rose 0.5% on the month. Adjust for inflation though, and the real increase was just 0.1%.
About half of that spending growth went to gas, energy, utilities, housing, and food. The basics.
Every morning, Market Briefs breaks down what inflation prints like this actually mean for your portfolio - in five minutes, plus a free investing masterclass when you sign up.
The Saving Rate Just Cratered
Here's where it gets uncomfortable. The personal saving rate dropped to 2.6% in April, the lowest level since June 2022, when inflation last hit a four-decade high.
That's down from 4.3% at the start of the year.
Disposable income, which is what's left after taxes, fell 0.1% in April. Adjusted for inflation, it actually dropped 0.5%.
Investors should read that as: households are spending more, earning less in real terms, and tapping savings to make up the gap.
The Fed's Plans Just Got Harder
The Fed, now led by new Chair Kevin Warsh, came in expected to cut rates this year. With inflation climbing back toward 4%, that's looking far less likely.
Other Fed voices are pushing back too. Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee warned this month that inflation is spreading past oil and gas, and Wall Street has pushed rate cut calls into late 2026.
What To Watch
Q1 GDP was revised down to a 1.6% annualized pace, but the Atlanta Fed is nowcasting 4.3% for Q2.
The economy is still moving, just on a more expensive tank of gas.
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