US inflation jumps in the wake of Hurricane Harvey
[WASHINGTON] Soaring fuel prices drove US inflation to an eight-month high in September, with the cost of gasoline hitting an eight-year record, the Labor Department reported Thursday.
The spike in gasoline costs was likely tied to Hurricane Harvey, which idled much of US energy production in late August and created shortages, officials said.
Otherwise, US price pressures remained tame, suggesting the energy-related jump could be transitory.
Monetary policymakers at the Federal Reserve remain divided over the dangers of inflation, with some Fed members pointing to persistent weakness and arguing that the central bank should delay raising rates.
But market participants widely expect the Fed to raise interest rates in December.
The Consumer Price Index, which tracks costs for household goods and services, rose 0.5 per cent in September, seasonally adjusted, the largest increase since January.
Analysts had been expecting an increase of 0.6 percent.
On a 12-month basis, the index rose by 2.2 percent, surpassing the Fed's two percent target.
"The data hurt the case for another Fed rate hike as soon as December, although we still think such a hike is more likely than not," Jim O'Sullivan of High Frequency Economics said in a research note.
Nearly all the September increase was due to the rise in the energy index, which jumped 6.1 per cent. Gasoline prices soared 13.1 per cent, their largest increase since June of 2009.
Excluding the volatile food and fuel categories, the "core" price index rose only by a token 0.1 per cent for the month, a tenth of a point below what analysts were expecting.
Year over year, September recorded a 1.7 per cent gain in the core index, the same level now recorded for this measure for five straight months.
Elsewhere in the September report, clothing for infants and toddlers rose seven percent, the largest one-month gain in more than 27 years.
The price of soups also rose 3.5 per cent over August, their largest one-month gain since January of 2008.
AFP
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