The Federal Reserve is almost universally viewed as on track to cut interest rates next week, despite inflation running at a 3% annual rate in September — well above the Fed’s 2% target. What gives?
The government shutdown has likely scuttled the release of October inflation data, the White House said. "Due to the Democrat Shutdown, surveyors cannot deploy to the field — depriving us of critical ...
OTTAWA—Inflation in Canada quickened more than anticipated last month, touching a seven-month high as price pressures continue to simmer in the country. The consumer-price index rose 0.1% in September ...
Inflation is on the rise again. That was the major economic takeaway on Friday morning after the Bureau of Labor Statistics released its delayed reading on inflation for September. Released later than ...
President Donald Trump says he beat inflation. But several conventional measures of rising prices paint a different picture. Most experts agree inflation has picked up in recent months, in part ...
The Consumer Price Index rose 3 percent from a year earlier, a slight acceleration. The report was delayed because of the government shutdown, and the White House said it was unlikely to release ...
Annual inflation rose to 3 percent in September as a jump in gasoline and energy prices pushed price growth to its highest level since January. The consumer price index (CPI) rose 0.3 percent last ...
The Consumer Price Index climbed at an annual rate of 3% in September, coming in below economists' forecasts as the impact of President Trump's tariffs remain muted. Economists polled by financial ...
The US Bureau of Labor Statistics' Consumer Price Index (CPI) released on 24 October 2025, noted that the US consumer inflation increased at a rate of 3% for the 12-month period ended September 2025, ...
A fresh reading Friday showing that inflation cooled slightly in September is likely to keep the Federal Reserve on course for another quarter-percentage-point interest rate cut next week amid ...
Since the shutdown began, the Bureau of Labor Statistics has not been gathering the new data it needs to produce future reports, since its staff is furloughed. By Ben Casselman and Tony Romm The ...