Inflation in the Federal Reserve’s preferred price gauge eased in January after making steady increases throughout the fall.
Inflation rose 2.5% over the year in January compared to 2.8% in December, marking the first decrease in four months.
The Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge cooled as expected in January, providing a hopeful data point to price-weary Americans.
The Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge cooled in January, if economists’ forecasts are right.
A large majority of Americans say their incomes aren't keeping pace with inflation. Here's what the numbers say.
US stocks open mostly up after Fed's favorite inflation gauge matches forecasts. But tariff worries linger. Indexes are on track for a losing month.
The US Bureau of Economic Analysis will release the January PCE Price Index at 7:00 PM today, a key inflation gauge that ...
The latest reading of the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge showed prices rose on a monthly basis but dropped year ...
French inflation dropped below 1% for the first time in four years in February, preliminary data from statistics agency INSEE ...
Inflation dropped slightly in January but consumer spending, the primary driver of the U.S. economy, also saw its biggest decline in four years.
The latest CBS News/YouGov poll found that Americans still have negative views on the economy and have mixed views on whether ...
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