U.S. producer prices climb 0.8% in June
U.S. wholesale prices jumped a seasonally adjusted 0.8% in June, mainly
because of a spike in gasoline prices, the government said Friday. It
was the biggest increase since last September and the second straight
sharp gain. Energy prices shot up 2.9%, spearheaded by a 7.2% runup in
the wholesale cost of gas. Food prices rose a much smaller 0.2%.
Excluding the volatile categories of food and energy, so-called core
wholesale prices rose 0.2%, the Labor Department
said. Economists surveyed by MarketWatch had predicted a 0.5% rise in
the overall producer price index and a 0.1% increase in core PPI. Over
the past 12 months wholesale prices have risen an unadjusted 2.5%, the
highest year-over-year increase since March 2012. Yet the more closely
followed core rate was up just 1.7% in June, unchanged from the prior
month. The Federal Reserve pays more attention to core inflation when
making decisions on whether to raise or lower interest rates.
The latest wholesale price report indicates that inflation remains
contained in most sectors of the economy. Gas prices have alternated
between sharp spikes and declines over the past few years.
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