Wholesale prices rose 0.7% in February, much more than expected and up 3.4% annually
Last edited Wed Mar 18, 2026, 09:27 AM - Edit history (1)
Source: CNBC
Published Wed, Mar 18 2026 8:33 AM EDT Updated 11 Min Ago
Wholesale prices rose sharply in February, providing another sign that inflation continues to percolate even aside from rising energy prices. The producer price index, a measure of pipeline costs that producers receive for their products, increased a seasonally adjusted 0.7% on the month, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Wednesday.
Excluding volatile food and energy costs, so-called core PPI increased 0.5%. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had been looking for increases of 0.3% for both measures. For the all items index, prices rose faster than the 0.5% pace in January. However, the core increase was less than the 0.8% for the prior month. On a 12-month basis, headline PPI inflation was at 3.4%, the most since February 2025, while core was at 3.9%, according to the BLS.
The Federal Reserve targets inflation at 2%. Stock market futures slipped following the report while Treasury yields were higher. Futures traders pushed out the next Fed interest rate cut until at least December.
The surge in PPI came due in large part to a 0.5% increase in services costs, something the Fed would not welcome. Policymakers have attributed much of the recent run-up in inflation to tariffs, which would not show up as much on the services end. Portfolio management fees, a key driver for services costs within the PPI measurement, were up 1% in February. Similarly, prices for securities brokerage, dealing, investment advice and related services accelerated 4.2%. Goods prices rose 1.1% on the month. Food prices rose 2.4% while energy was up 2.3%. Within food, the index for fresh and dry vegetables soared 48.9%.
Read more: https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/18/ppi-inflation-february-2026.html
From the source -
Link to tweet
@BLS_gov
PPI for final demand advances 0.7% in February; services rise 0.5%, goods increase 1.1% #BLSData https://bls.gov/news.release/archives/ppi_03182026.htm
8:30 AM · Mar 18, 2026
Article updated.
Previous articles/headline -
Wholesale prices rose sharply in February, providing another sign that inflation continues to percolate even aside from rising energy prices. The producer price index, a measure of pipeline costs that producers receive for their products, increased a seasonally adjusted 0.7% on the month, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Wednesday. Excluding volatile food and energy costs, so-called core PPI increased 0.5%. Excluding food, energy and trade services, PPI rose 0.5%.
Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had been looking for increases of 0.3% for both measures. For the all items index, prices rose faster than the 0.5% pace in January. However, the core increase was less than the 0.8% for the prior month. On a 12-month basis, headline PPI inflation was at 3.4%, the most since February 2025, while core was at 3.9%, according to the BLS. The Federal Reserve targets inflation at 2%.
Stock market futures slipped following the report while Treasury yields were higher. Futures traders pushed out the next Fed interest rate cut until at least December.
The surge in PPI came due in large part to a 0.5% increase in services costs, something the Fed would not welcome. Policymakers have attributed much of the recent run-up in inflation to tariffs, which would not show up as much on the services end. Portfolio management fees, a key driver for services costs within the PPI measurement, were up 1% in February. Similarly, prices for securities brokerage, dealing, investment advice and related services accelerated 4.2%. Goods prices rose 1.1% on the month. Food prices rose 2.4% while energy was up 2.3%. Within food, the index for fresh and dry vegetables soared 48.9%.
Wholesale prices rose 0.7% in February, much more than expected
Original article -
Wholesale prices rose sharply in February, providing another sign that inflation continues to percolate even aside from rising energy prices.
The producer price index, a measure of pipeline costs that producers receive for their products, increased a seasonally adjusted 0.7% on the month, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Wednesday. Excluding volatile food and energy costs, so-called core PPI increased 0.5%. Excluding food, energy and trade services, PPI rose 0.5%.
Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had been looking for increases of 0.3% for both measures. For the all items index, prices rose faster than the 0.5% pace in January. However, the core increase was less than the 0.8% for the prior month. On a 12-month basis, PPI inflation was at 3.4%, the most since February 2025, according to the BLS. The Federal Reserve targets inflation at 2%.
The surge in PPI came due in large part to a 0.5% increase in services costs, something the Fed would not welcome. Policymakers have attributed much of the recent run-up in inflation to tariffs, which would not show up as much on the services end. Goods prices rose 1.1% on the month. Food prices rose 2.4% while energy was up 2.3%. Within food, the index for fresh and dry vegetables soared 48.9%.
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The producer price index was expected to increase 0.3% in February.
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bucolic_frolic
(55,217 posts)That feeds inflation. From 1972 to 1980, home prices tripled.
It's 1972 all over again. Expect to be hollowed out just to stay alive.
That's how the economic cycles feed the rich. And they augment it however they can.
Be tight-fisted! You only live once.
IbogaProject
(5,928 posts)Housing price rises have been ongoing so more late 1970s.
617Blue
(2,498 posts)samsingh
(18,428 posts)patphil
(9,085 posts)And could get as high as 1% a month as the war costs really begin to hit home.
On Saturday, gas in Chester NY was $3.69. On Sunday, it jumped up another $0.10! We're going over $4.00 soon.
Personally, I feel the Trump war will last through the summer. If it's still going on in September, the republicans will get destroyed in the November election. Even the SAVE act won't save them.
peppertree
(23,364 posts)And as PatPhil explained so well, it'll only get worse in March and (probably) beyond.
So much winning.
progree
(13,001 posts)# BLS SOURCE: https://www.bls.gov/news.release/ppi.nr0.htm
# PPI http://data.bls.gov/timeseries/WPSFD4
# PPI ex food, energy, and trade services http://data.bls.gov/timeseries/WPSFD49116


This is all pre-Iran war, which began February 28.
This is all pre-Iran war, which began February 28.
The BLS features the above two in their news release. The news release never mentions a PPI less food and energy.
Food, energy, and trade services are the volatile components
The trade services is very volatile:
See Table 1 in ppi.nr0.htm: https://www.bls.gov/news.release/ppi.t01.htm
Trade Services month-over-month percentage increases in the last 5 months were:
. . . -0.9% -0.5% +1.9% +2.2% +0.4%.
12 months: +5.2%
That's why they strip it out of their core measure (actually they never use the word "core" )
progree
(13,001 posts)A "triple"!
niyad
(132,564 posts)it doesn't even come close to what I see daily.
JT45242
(4,049 posts)We are facing a Bush 2 size crash in the next 12 months
Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin
(135,852 posts)Skittles
(171,792 posts)twodogsbarking
(18,830 posts)BumRushDaShow
(169,950 posts)roamer65
(37,962 posts)IronLionZion
(51,305 posts)the stock market is propped up by inflation as it is. Stock prices are way too high relative to their valuation.
progree
(13,001 posts)Last edited Thu Mar 19, 2026, 09:35 AM - Edit history (1)
All 3 inflation sets of graphs (PPI, PCE, CPI) are at the top of my journal, one right after the other
both regular and core measures
https://www.democraticunderground.com/~progree
The links to the data are in those posts
NOTE: the PCE graphs are for JANUARY, which is the latest PCE report to date.
The CPI and PPI (wholesale prices) are for February
All of this of course is before the US/Israeli attack on Iran on February 28.
I annualize everything for comparisons to each other and to the 2% Federal Reserve inflation goal
One month increase (month-over-month) (annualized)
. . REGULAR CORE MONTH
PPI 8.5% 6.5% FEB (wholesale prices)
CPI 3.2% 2.6% FEB
PCE 3.3% 4.4% JAN
GOAL 2.0% 2.0%
Average increase over last 3 months (annualized):
. . REGULAR CORE MONTH
PPI 6.6% 4.5% FEB (wholesale prices)
CPI 3.0% 3.0% FEB
PCE 3.5% 3.7% JAN
GOAL 2.0% 2.0%
The above really puts in perspective how hot today's PPI report is. They are all bad, but the PPI is at a special level of bad.
The PPI Core is the regular PPI but without food, energy, and trade services