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Inflation Cools Significantly! US December CPI Slides to 2.4%, Opening Wide Room for Fed Rate Cuts

2026-02-14

According to the latest data released, the US CPI year-over-year growth rate for December 2025 declined significantly from 2.7% in the previous month to 2.4%. This not only reverses the rebound trend seen in the third quarter where it briefly rose to 3.0%, but also marks the lowest level since April of the same year. This year-end report card indicates that inflation pressure is easing at an accelerated pace, leaving the Federal Reserve's (Fed) long-term target of 2% just a step away, drawing a perfect conclusion to the battle against inflation in 2025.

Analyzing the components in depth, the main reasons for this cooling data are the continued weakness in energy prices and the slowdown in services inflation. According to market analysis, energy items played a key role in dragging down the index at year-end, offsetting some of the gains in core commodities; meanwhile, shelter costs, which had been the most stubborn in the past, are also showing signs of peaking and retreating, with monthly increases gradually narrowing. This broad-based price stabilization indicates that the lag effects of high-interest-rate policies are fermenting fully within the real economy.

Institutional investors have generally interpreted this data positively. Goldman Sachs noted that with supply chain bottlenecks completely resolved and the labor market balancing supply and demand, the US economy is entering the sweet spot of a "soft landing." Although some investment banks initially expected inflation at the end of 2025 might remain around 2.9% due to interference from tariff policies, the actual figure of 2.4% outperformed the consensus of most Wall Street analysts, showing that inflation stickiness is fading earlier than anticipated.

Looking ahead to 2026, in the short term (1-2 months), CPI is expected to fluctuate within the range of 2.3%-2.5%, and attention should be paid to slight fluctuations caused by seasonal adjustments at the beginning of the year. In the medium term (3-6 months), if shelter service inflation continues to cool, CPI has the potential to officially touch the 2% target by mid-year. This will provide the Federal Reserve with ample policy flexibility, and the market has currently begun to price in a potential preventive rate cut in the middle of 2026 to support the labor market and economic growth.

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