US producer prices beats estimates as services costs surge

US producer prices beats estimates as services costs surge
Vatsala Gaur
Feb 27, 2026, 10:08 A.M.

Wholesale prices in the United States rose at a faster-than-expected pace in January, dimming hopes that inflationary pressures were easing and complicating the outlook for interest rate cuts later this year.

Data released on Friday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed that the core producer price index, which strips out volatile food and energy components, increased by a seasonally adjusted 0.8% last month.

That was stronger than the 0.6% rise in December and well above the 0.3% increase expected by economists surveyed by Dow Jones.

On a headline basis, producer prices rose 0.5% in January, also exceeding the consensus forecast of 0.3% and marking a modest acceleration from the previous month.

Annual pace remains elevated

On a year-on-year basis, core wholesale prices rose 3.6%, while the headline producer price index increased 2.9%.

Both readings remain comfortably above the Federal Reserve’s 2% inflation target, underscoring that price pressures remain a feature of the US economy despite recent signs of cooling in consumer inflation.

Economists often view producer price data as an early signal of where consumer inflation may head, particularly as companies adjust pricing strategies in response to higher costs.

Services drive the increase

January’s acceleration was largely driven by services prices, which climbed 0.8% on the month, the sharpest increase since July 2025.

By contrast, goods prices fell 0.3%, although core goods prices, which exclude food and energy, still rose 0.7%.

More than one-fifth of the rise in services prices came from higher margins for professional and commercial equipment wholesaling.

Those margins surged 14.4%, suggesting that businesses may be passing on higher costs, including those linked to tariffs.

Trade services prices rose 2.5%, adding further upward pressure on wholesale inflation.

Elsewhere, prices increased across a range of categories including apparel, footwear and accessories retailing, chemicals and allied products wholesaling, bundled wired telecommunications services, and health, beauty and optical goods retailing.

Food and alcohol retailing prices also moved higher.

On the goods side, energy and food prices declined during the month, helping offset broader pressures, while metals prices jumped 4.8%.

Policy backdrop and political pressure

The data arrive as President Donald Trump has repeatedly argued that inflation has been brought under control.

However, the latest PPI figures suggest pipeline pressures remain, a factor that could keep policymakers cautious as they consider the next steps for monetary policy.

Markets currently expect the Federal Reserve to remain on hold until at least the summer, despite calls from the White House for lower interest rates.

Why PPI matters for the Fed

While producer prices tend to be more volatile than consumer prices, Wall Street analysts monitor them closely because several PPI components feed into the personal consumption expenditures price index, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge.

Ahead of Friday’s release, economists had estimated that core PCE inflation could rise by as much as 0.5% in January, implying an annual rate of about 3.1%.

Core PCE inflation increased 0.4% in December and stood at 3.0% year on year.

The government is scheduled to publish the January PCE inflation report on March 13, and analysts are expected to update their forecasts following the stronger-than-expected wholesale price data.