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Topline
Consumer prices rose 7.5% in the 12 months ending in January, according to data released Thursday by the Labor Department, climbing more than economists expected amid a massive surge that’s pushed the Federal Reserve to ease its pandemic-era stimulus more quickly than expected.
Key Facts
Overall prices rose 0.6% from December—higher than the 0.4% economists were expecting and the previous month’s increase of 0.5%.
On a yearly basis, prices jumped 7.5% last month, the largest annual increase since February 1982.
Key Background
Trillions of dollars in unprecedented government spending helped keep the economy afloat during the pandemic, but levels of historically high inflation have rattled the market in recent months—and even more so in the new year. After rising 27% in 2021, the benchmark S&P 500 index is down more than 4% so far this year Bank of America and Morgan Stanley are among the Wall Street investment banks that have warned inflation—and not the pandemic—is now the biggest risk to the market. The Federal Reserve, meanwhile, has started to taper, or reduce, its accommodative monetary policy efforts in an effort to combat rising prices, and it forecasts three interest rate hikes this year. Last month, the International Monetary Fund downgraded its U.S. economic growth projections from 5.2% to 4%, citing, among other things, the Federal Reserve’s removal of pandemic-era stimulus.
Further Reading
Tech Stocks Rebound Ahead Of ‘Not As Bad As Feared’ Inflation Report (Forbes)
Stocks Surge After Powell Says Fed Not Afraid To Raise Rates Further If Higher Inflation Persists (Forbes)
The Best Investing Strategies For Inflationary Times (Forbes)
Financial Services