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Wholesale Inflation Just Hit 6%. Energy's The Easy Story, Tariffs Are The Bigger One

Published May 13, 2026
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Summary:
  • Producer prices jumped 1.4% in April, nearly triple what Wall Street expected.
  • Core PPI, which strips out food and energy, rose 1% versus the 0.4% forecast.
  • Trade services prices climbed 2.7%, the strongest sign yet that tariff costs are reaching consumers.

Wholesale prices just had their hottest month in over three years, and the easy story is gasoline. The harder one is that tariff costs are starting to push through to almost everything else.

The producer price index, which tracks what businesses pay for goods and services before those costs reach you, rose 1.4% in April. Economists had penciled in 0.5%.

On a 12-month basis, prices have climbed 6%. That's the steepest yearly rise since the end of 2022.

Energy Did Most Of The Damage

Gas prices ran past $4 a gallon in April as the Iran war squeezed global energy supply, fueling a 15.6% surge in wholesale gasoline prices and a 7.8% jump in final demand energy. Roughly three-quarters of the gain in goods prices traced back to energy.

That part isn't shocking. Oil shocks bleed into everything that has to be moved, shipped, or burned.

What's harder to dismiss is what's happening underneath.

Want the kind of read that separates the loud headline from the one that actually moves your money? Market Briefs delivers it in five minutes a day, plus a free investing masterclass when you join.

Services Are Where Tariffs Are Showing Up

Strip out food and energy and prices still jumped 1%, with the services side of the report rising 1.2% - its biggest move since March 2022.

The standout line was trade services, which measures the margins wholesalers and retailers charge to move goods. That number climbed 2.7%, while margins on machinery and equipment wholesaling rose 3.5%.

Those are the channels tariff costs usually travel through on their way to your bill.

David Russell, global head of market strategy at TradeStation, called inflation "sticky and accelerating," and said the core reading points to a deeper structural trend in services.

Why Investors Should Care

This report came one day after consumer prices rose 3.8% year over year, with core CPI sitting at 2.8% - well above the Fed's 2% target.

The Fed has held its benchmark rate at 3.5% to 3.75% all year, and traders now see almost no chance of cuts in 2026. Odds of a hike actually rose to about 39% after this print.

Dow futures slipped on the news as Treasury yields ticked up. Both moves point to the same fear, that the Fed gets stuck.

What To Watch

Energy is up and down, and the gas spike could reverse, but trade services tend to be stickier. If next month's PPI keeps showing strength in services and wholesale margins, the inflation story stops being about the Iran war and starts being about the cost of importing things into America.

The Fed will get one more PPI and one more CPI before its next meeting. The tariff story sits in both.

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