Inflation edged up in Sep., report shows
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Inflation, Wall Street
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Inflation rose in September. The Bureau of Labor Statistics released CPI data during the government shutdown, which has affected some operations.
Economists expect prices to have risen 3.1% in September, which would mark a slight increase from a 2.9% year-over-year increase recorded a month prior. The anticipated reading would amount to the highest inflation since May 2024.
Consumer prices rose in September at an annual rate of 3%, but increased a little less than economists had predicted, the Labor Department reported Friday.
The cost of living got even more expensive for Americans last month, with prices rising at the fastest pace since the start of the year.
The September data gives the Fed a clear path for widely expected rate cuts heading into their remaining meetings this year.
Economists think inflation around the U.S. continued to climb in September, edging farther away from the Fed's 2% annual target.
Inflation remained elevated in September as the BLS released the delayed consumer price index inflation report, as Fed policymakers are set to weigh interest rate cuts next week.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics' September consumer price index report shows that inflation increased 3% compared to last year and fell to 0.2% on a month-to-month basis. NBC News' Brian Cheung and Investopedia editor-in-chief Caleb Silver break down the numbers in the first major economic report released since the government shutdown.
The latest inflation report may or may not have an adverse impact on mortgage rates. It's too soon to tell definitively. But it won't help ease the Fed toward additional rate cuts, and it could complicate the mortgage rate climate more than it already is.