Economist: U.S. March CPI month-on-month may jump by 1%, and the Federal Reserve may find it difficult to cut interest rates this year

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ME News, April 5 (UTC+8). Economists say the sudden increase in gasoline prices felt directly by American consumers will be fully reflected in the key inflation data to be released this week. It is expected that the US March CPI will rise 1% month-on-month, the largest single-month increase since 2022; core CPI may increase by 0.3% month-on-month. Earlier, the Iran war pushed gasoline prices at US gas stations up by about $1 per gallon. The day before the CPI data is released, the inflation indicator favored by the Federal Reserve will provide information on price pressure before the war. Economists expect the core PCE price index may have risen 0.4% for the third consecutive month in February, indicating that even before the outbreak of conflict, the process of inflation easing to more moderate levels has stalled. Combined with signs that the US labor market is stabilizing, stubborn price pressure, and new inflation risks brought by the Middle East war, this helps explain why the Federal Reserve may find it difficult to cut interest rates this year. (Source: Jin10)

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