Zinger Key Points
- Producer prices stalled in February, with core inflation posting a rare decline, reinforcing hopes of easing cost pressures.
- Headline PPI was flat, while core PPI fell 0.1%, marking the first monthly decline since mid-2024.
- The new Benzinga Rankings show you exactly how stocks stack up—scoring them across five key factors that matter most to investors. Every day, one stock rises to the top. Which one is leading today?
U.S. producer prices unexpectedly stagnated in February, while core inflation posted a rare contraction, reinforcing hopes that cost pressures may be easing despite lingering concerns over trade tariffs.
The Producer Price Index (PPI) remained flat on a monthly basis in February, a sharp deceleration from January's upwardly revised 0.6% gain and below expectations of a 0.3% increase.
Core PPI, which excludes food and energy, fell 0.1% in February, marking its first monthly decline since July 2024. This came after January's figure was revised higher to a 0.5% gain.
On a year-over-year basis, headline producer inflation eased to 3.2%, down from January's upwardly revised 3.7%, while core PPI slowed to 3.4%, from a revised 3.8% in the previous month.
The weaker-than-expected producer inflation report follows Friday's consumer price index data, which also came in softer than anticipated, strengthening the case for Federal Reserve rate cuts later this year.
Price Drivers: Food Jumps, Services Fall
The muted headline figure masked significant divergences across categories. Food prices surged 1.7%, largely driven by an extraordinary 53.6% spike in egg prices.
Other contributors to the increase included pork, fresh and dry vegetables, electric power, tobacco products, and carbon steel scrap.
Yet, gasoline prices fell 4.7%, exerting downward pressure on the overall index.
Meanwhile, the index for final demand services declined 0.2%, the steepest drop since July 2024, suggesting cooling inflationary pressures in service-related sectors.
Market Reactions
- U.S. dollar: The dollar strengthened despite the softer PPI report, with the U.S. dollar index, tracked by the Invesco DB USD Index Bullish Fund ETF UUP, rising 0.4%.
- Treasury yields: The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield increased 2 basis points to 4.33% as markets reassessed inflation risks.
- Stock market: Selling pressure on equities resumed after a brief rebound on Wednesday. Futures on major U.S. indices recorded losses in the premarket trading, with S&P 500 futures down 0.2% at 8:39 a.m. ET.
- On Wednesday, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust SPY closed at $558.87, up 0.5% but still hovering near its lowest levels in seven months and about 3% below its 200-day moving average.
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