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USD: Inflation pressures stay firm – Wells Fargo

Wells Fargo Economics expects April U.S. CPI to firm, with headline inflation rising toward 3.8% year-over-year and core near 2.9%. The team projects a 0.63% monthly gain in headline CPI and 0.50% in core, driven by energy spillovers and core services, while shelter inflation is seen cooling again later this year.

Core and headline CPI seen elevated

"April's CPI report will be more interesting than usual. The ongoing conflict in the Middle East has kept energy prices elevated, which will start to generate more obvious spillovers into other areas of inflation. We estimate headline CPI to rise 0.63% over the month, lifting the year-over-year pace to 3.8%."

"Excluding food and energy, we look for core CPI to increase 0.50% in April and 2.9% on a year-ago basis. The monthly pop is expected to be driven by core services, where strength will be partly—but not entirely—a mirage. The unwinding of a government shutdown-related survey quirk is expected to lead primary shelter to increase at twice its recent pace."

"We expect shelter inflation to quickly resume its moderation in May though, as real-time rent measures point to further softening. Excluding shelter, services should be genuinely hot thanks to higher jet fuel costs leading to a jump in airfares."

"Looking ahead, we continue to forecast the year‑over‑year rate of core CPI to remain stuck close to 3.0% this year. Shelter inflation should continue to cool, but progress elsewhere is proving harder to come by. At the same time, slowing wage growth has weighed on consumer purchasing power and will likely limit firms’ ability to pass along higher costs."

"That should help temper broader inflation by year-end even as underlying pressures remain firm."

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)

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FXStreet Insights Team

The FXStreet Insights Team is a group of journalists that handpicks selected market observations published by renowned experts. The content includes notes by commercial as well as additional insights by internal and external analysts.

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