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US Q1 Core PCE YoY Marginally Dips to 3.0%; Tariffs Drive Up Goods Costs, Adding to Inflation Stickiness

2026-04-10

  1. Core Overview: According to the latest data, the YoY growth rate of the US Core Personal Consumption Expenditures (Core PCE) Price Index for the first quarter of 2026 (Q1 2026) fell back to 3.0%, a slight decrease from the previous period's 3.1%. The trend of this inflation gauge, most favored by the Federal Reserve, met market consensus expectations, though it remains stuck in the high 3% range for multiple consecutive months. Overall, it indicates that the "last mile" toward the 2% inflation target is much bumpier than anticipated.

  2. Key Components: Breaking down the details of the data, goods and services exhibit starkly different temperatures. On the one hand, core services inflation showed signs of cooling, driven by falling housing and rent prices; on the other hand, core goods inflation rose against the trend. Data shows that the YoY growth rate of core goods prices has climbed significantly recently, becoming a key resistance that prevents overall prices from falling more rapidly.

  3. In-depth Attribution: Regarding the reasons for stubbornly high core inflation, institutions and the Federal Reserve mostly point to the pass-through of external costs. The Federal Reserve's policy review report noted that the recent implementation of import tariffs has gradually been passed on to the terminal consumer market, directly pushing up core goods inflation. At the same time, investment banks like Goldman Sachs have warned that supply chain disruptions caused by geopolitical factors such as the Middle East conflict are invisibly driving up the operational costs of core services excluding housing.

  4. Outlook and Risks: Looking ahead, in the short term (1-2 months), because Core PCE remains as high as 3.0%, the market has heavily priced in that the Federal Reserve will stand pat, making the probability of a short-term rate cut very slim. In the medium term (3-6 months), the biggest risk lies in whether the expansion of the Middle East war will trigger more severe supply chain disruptions and energy shocks. If compounded by the continuing long-tail effects of tariff policies, this could force the Federal Reserve to restart tightening assessments, creating a new round of pressure on the macroeconomic market.

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