On August 12, 2025, people shop for pet supplies at pet retailers in New York City.
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Goldman Sachs is getting heated for calls that heavier consumer inflation is ahead of tariff-induced, but that view is not the only one among Wall Street brothers.
Despite investors accepting Tuesday’s rather benign consumer price index report, economists expect the biggest impact on inflation has yet to come.
The general sentiment is that pre-duty inventory will be rolled out, effective tariff rates will rise, and businesses are not willing to absorb higher costs from their duties, so consumers will be increasingly biting for the year.
“Taxes could subtract 1% from GDP and add 1-1.5% to inflation,” said Michael Feroli, chief US economist at JPMorgan Chase. “There is considerable uncertainty about the degree of consumer price pass-through, given that this year’s tariff increase is much greater than anything in the post-war US experience.”
President Donald Trump released Goldman Sachs on Tuesday on weekends for research into the company’s economists claimed that consumers will be hit considerably harder by the end of the year. Goldman Sachs economist David Merrick, who appeared on CNBC on Friday, defended the call, saying the company is not obsessed with Trump’s criticism.
In a social post of truth, the president proposed that CEO David Solomon fire economists considering writing or resigning themselves.
However, if all market economists in the same camp are rejected about the impact of tariffs, Wall Street will have many empty desks.
Inflation creeps higher
Most people see stable grinding at least high prices as tariff clarity emerges, with what appears to be an effective rate of around 18% taking root with some warnings compared to about 3% at the beginning of the year.
“The downward trend of core inflation appears to be broken as tariffs begin to become retail prices,” writes Brian Rose, senior economist at UBS. “We expect inflation to continue gradually with a rising trend as businesses cross along higher costs, but slowing down shelter inflation and pushback from increasingly consumers should help offset some of the impact of tariffs.”
No one predicts outrageous inflation. It appears to be an increase of 0.3%-0.5% each month. This is enough to push the Federal Reserve priority core measure somewhere in the low range from 3% range.
What’s more, whatever the acceleration is, after watching everything in 2025, we’re not expected to discourage the Fed from staying at low interest rates from the start. Economists believe that the labor market will deteriorate, along with the belief that inflation will be temporary.
However, in the near future, increasing inflation could hinder consumer spending and dent growth throughout the remainder of the year. JPMorgan is seeing a hit in gross domestic product, with two-thirds of that being “less than a little.”
The August Blue Chip Economic Indicator Report, which looks at Wall Street’s major economic names, estimates GDP growth will average at only 0.85% later this year. However, some of the most pessimistic predictors have actually surpassed the 0.75% forecast from July, as they have changed their view on the view that “the tariff constraint effect will be expected to be temporary, as the tariff constraint effect will improve considerably next year.”
I’m worried about it first
The short-term causes of concern include the expiration of the De Minimis tariff exception on August 29th. It can hit retail products in particular.
Pantheon Macroeconomics forecasts a 1% point gain on core inflation, ultimately reaching 3.5% by the end of the year.
“So far, about a quarter of that bump has filtered out consumers, so I think it’s likely that core product prices will rise faster in the coming months,” the company said.
BNP Paribas noted that they expect price increases to exceed goods as recent research “suggests upward pressure on input prices for services.”
“The main concern about Fed inflation is not at an exact level, but rather a lot of stickiness,” the company added in the memo. “Therefore, the July (CPI) printing, which has an incredible strength in its core services, is not compelling good news.”
The issue of inflation “stickiness” is also important.
Cleveland Fed’s CPI inflation measure of sticky prices includes items such as rent, off-home food, insurance, and home furniture, but shows a steady increase. It’s 3.8% on a three-month annual basis, the highest since May 2024. Flexible price inflation for food, energy, auto parts and more is running much lower.
“Taxes will lead to higher inflation in the coming months,” wrote Gas Faucher, chief economist at PNC. “As CPI’s core CPI increases in July and prices rise as businesses increase tariff costs for customers, core PCE inflation is set to surpass the Fed’s target in the coming months.”
Most streets expect a path to assess cuts, but high inflation rates makers more likely to hesitate even when the labor market is weak, Faucher said.