Home Community Insights U.S. Producer Price Index in March Rose 0.5% MoM

U.S. Producer Price Index in March Rose 0.5% MoM

U.S. Producer Price Index in March Rose 0.5% MoM

The US Producer Price Index (PPI) for final demand in March 2026 rose 0.5% month-over-month, well below economists’ consensus expectations of around 1.1% or as high as 1.2% in some polls. On a year-over-year basis, PPI increased to 4.0%, the highest since February 2023, but that also undershot forecasts of about 4.6%–4.7%.

Core PPI excluding food and energy rose just 0.1% month-over-month versus ~0.5% expected and held steady at 3.8% year-over-year. Goods drove much of the monthly gain (+1.6%), largely due to surging energy prices (e.g., gasoline +15.7%). This reflects the impact of geopolitical tensions, including the US-Iran conflict and related oil supply concerns.

Services were flat (0.0% month-over-month), which helped keep the overall print cooler than anticipated. Offsetting factors included a sharp drop in natural gas prices, compressed trade margins (retailers absorbing some costs), and softer food prices. February’s figures were revised downward slightly, showing the same 0.5% monthly gain.

This data follows a hotter-than-expected March CPI release and comes amid elevated energy volatility. While the annual PPI hit a three-year high, the below-consensus print suggests inflationary pressures from energy shocks may not be transmitting as broadly or aggressively through the economy as feared like services holding steady and narrower pass-through from crude oil spikes.

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Markets reacted positively to the miss, with some relief that it wasn’t as hot as the energy-driven forecasts implied—potentially easing higher-for-longer rate hike fears, though the Fed is still widely expected to hold rates steady in the near term due to lingering inflation risks from energy and other factors.

PPI serves as an upstream indicator for future consumer prices (CPI/PCE), so this softer-than-expected reading could provide some breathing room, but watch for April data and how energy costs evolve. Stocks mildly positive reaction. S&P 500 futures and equities showed modest gains or resilience at the open, as the miss reduced fears of aggressive pass-through from energy shocks.

Some relief rally in growth-sensitive areas. Bonds and Treasuries muted to slightly supportive. 10-year Treasury yields were little changed or edged lower around 4.15–4.29% range in sessions, with limited bond market enthusiasm despite the cooler headline. Oil’s later decline added some downward pressure on yields.

US Dollar (DXY) weakened modestly declining ~0.35% toward 98.00, as softer inflation data reduced higher-for-longer bets and supported a relatively dovish Fed outlook. Reinforces the Fed staying on hold in the near term widely expected anyway. Eases immediate final hike or sharp repricing fears, but doesn’t open the door wide for imminent cuts—markets still price only low odds ~1 in 4 of any cut by end-2026.

Suggests limited broad transmission of energy and geopolitical pressures so far especially flat services, providing some breathing room ahead of April data and PCE readings. Core trends remain a focus for underlying stickiness. The print offered modest disinflationary relief amid ongoing energy volatility and prior hotter CPI, helping stabilize sentiment without dramatically shifting the higher-for-longer baseline narrative.

Flat services PPI (0.0% MoM) and very soft core PPI (+0.1% MoM) signal that energy-driven goods inflation is not broadly feeding into service-sector pricing, where most jobs and wage setting occur. Distributors/retailers absorbing costs via compressed margins further dampens wage-push inflation risks.

Recent March jobs report already showed cooling wage growth; average hourly earnings +0.2% MoM/+3.5% YoY, both below expectations and down from prior month. The PPI miss reinforces this trend, reducing risks of a wage-price spiral. Softer upstream inflation eases cost pressures on businesses, potentially helping preserve hiring margins in services-heavy sectors which drove much of recent job growth.

No immediate negative impulse on payrolls. The labor market remains resilient but not overheating (March NFP +178k with volatility from strikes and revisions; unemployment at 4.3%). Cooler PPI adds breathing room without signaling sharp slowdown. Reinforces Fed on hold near-term: Reduces urgency for tighter policy to combat labor-driven inflation, though energy volatility and geopolitical risks keep rate cuts off the table for now.

Overall, the print leans mildly positive for labor by containing cost pressures without derailing demand, helping avoid layoffs or hiring freezes that hotter PPI might have risked. Reaction was subdued compared to hotter prior months’ data which had pushed yields up and stocks down. Watch oil prices, ceasefire developments, and upcoming CPI/PCE for follow-through.

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