On Monday, March 7, 2022, workers packed cast iron cooking utensils at the Lodge Manufacturing Company factory in South Pittsburgh, Tennessee.
Luke Charlett | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Wholesale prices fell surprisingly slightly in August, providing breathing rooms for the Federal Reserve to approve interest rate cuts at its meeting this month, according to a report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics on Wednesday.
The producer price index, which measures the input costs of a wide range of goods and services, rose 0.7% down 0.7% in July, and fell 0.1% for the month after Dow Jones estimates increased 0.3%. On a 12-month basis, I had a gain of 2.6% on the PPI in the headline.
Core PPI, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, was also 0.1% off since it was expected to rise by 0.3%. Excluding food, energy and trade, PPI recorded a profit of 0.3%, up 2.8% from a year ago.
Stock market futures were acquired after release, but the Treasury yield was slightly negative.
This release comes a week before the central bank’s Federal Open Market Committee publishes its decision on its major overnight borrowing rates.
Pricing in the futures market means a 100% chance that the Commission will approve first-rate cuts after December 2024, but PPI releases and consumer pricing readings are closely monitored for signs of whether policymakers will continue. According to CME Group’s FedWatch gauge, the odds of half-point reduction, which increased slightly after PPI release, increased slightly after PPI release.
Service prices, a key Fed in assessing monetary policy attitudes, recorded a 0.2% drop, lowering wholesale inflation. A slide of 1.7% of the price of trade services was the main driving force, with a fall of 3.9% for the wholesale machinery and vehicle.
Product prices rose, but only 0.1% as core prices rose 0.3%. Food costs in final demand increased by 0.1%, while energy fell by 0.4%.
“We’ve been working hard to get the better of our customers,” said Chris Rappky, chief economist at FWDBonds. “There’s very little to stop interest rate cuts coming now.”
Although inflation has far surpassed the Fed’s 2% target, officials have expressed confidence that prices will gradually decline by easing housing and wage pressures.
The Fed is resisting interest rate cuts this year as officials monitor the impact of President Donald Trump’s aggressive tariffs on US imports. Tariffs have historically not been a permanent cause of inflation, but the broad nature of Trump’s move has raised concerns that this episode could be different.
Tobacco products affected by tariffs increased 2.3% in August. Portfolio management costs, a key factor in the July increase, rose 2% after a 5.8% increase the previous month.
On his part, Trump bags the Fed to cut fees, claiming that tariffs are not inflation, and that the economy needs low fees to drive growth and cap the cost of funding inflated government bonds.
The Fed has seen growing concern over employment figures while fears of inflation are eased. A BLS report on Tuesday shows that the economy has generated nearly 1 million jobs than was first reported in the year before March 2025.
Next week’s Fed meeting will show you both price determinations and updates on where authorities look at the future economy and interest rates.