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Inflation Isn't Done Yet — and the Latest Numbers Prove It

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Published Feb 27, 2026
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A piggy bank with coins, a grocery receipt with a red upward arrow, and a shopping basket of groceries sit on a wooden table, illustrating rising food costs reflected in the latest inflation data.
Summary:

  • January wholesale prices rose more than twice what economists expected
  • Core inflation hit its highest level in 10 months
  • Markets sold off on the news, fearing the Fed will hold rates higher for longer

Inflation was supposed to be cooling off. January's wholesale price data had other ideas.

What the Numbers Say

The Producer Price Index — which tracks what businesses pay each other for goods and services before those costs reach consumers — rose 0.5% in January, nearly double what economists had forecast. The core reading, which strips out food and energy, jumped 0.8% — the sharpest monthly increase in nearly a year.

Think of PPI as an early warning system. When businesses are paying more, they usually pass those costs downstream — meaning today's wholesale prices can become next month's grocery bill.

Why It Matters

The report sent stocks tumbling Friday morning. The Dow dropped over 700 points, with investors worried the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates on hold well into the summer — or longer. Markets had been hoping for rate cuts sooner.

There's also a tariff fingerprint in the data. Prices for apparel, footwear, and chemicals all moved sharply higher — categories that tend to feel the effects of import tariffs quickly. That's a problem for anyone hoping trade policy wouldn't show up in prices.

The Bigger Picture

The Fed's inflation target is 2%. Core wholesale prices are now running at 3.6% annually — the highest in 10 months. President Trump has been pushing loudly for lower rates, but the data isn't giving the Fed much room to move.

Rate cuts feel further away today than they did yesterday.

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