Inflation in focus: Unpacking the March CPI report
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Inflation in focus: Unpacking the March CPI report

jpmorgan 15.04.2026 351 просмотров

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In this episode of J.P. Morgan’s Making Sense, global economist Maia Crook is joined by senior U.S. economist Mike Hanson to break down the March CPI report. They discuss the energy-driven jump in headline inflation, why core inflation may remain firm and signs of tariff pass-through. The conversation also explores why CPI and the Fed’s preferred Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) measure are sending different signals, how that gap could shape Fed policy and how the Iran conflict may influence the global inflation outlook.   This episode was recorded on April 13, 2026.   This communication is provided for information purposes only. Please visit www.jpmm.com/research/disclosures (http://www.jpmm.com/research/disclosures)  for important disclosures. JPMorgan Chase & Co. or its affiliates and/or subsidiaries (collectively, J.P. Morgan) normally make a market and trade as principal in securities, other financial products and other asset classes that may be discussed in this communication. This communication has been prepared based upon information from sources believed to be reliable, but J.P. Morgan does not warrant its completeness or accuracy except with respect to any disclosures relative to J.P. Morgan and/or its affiliates and an analyst's involvement with any company (or security, other financial product or other asset class) that may be the subject of this communication. Any opinions and estimates constitute our judgment as of the date of this material and are subject to change without notice. Past performance is not indicative of future results. This communication is not intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale of any financial instrument. J.P. Morgan Research does not provide individually tailored investment advice. Any opinions and recommendations herein do not take into account individual circumstances, objectives, or needs and are not intended as recommendations of particular securities, financial instruments or strategies. You must make your own independent decisions regarding any securities, financial instruments or strategies mentioned or related to the information herein. Periodic updates may be provided on companies, issuers or industries based on specific developments or announcements, market conditions or any other publicly available information. However, J.P. Morgan may be restricted from updating information contained in this communication for regulatory or other reasons. This communication may not be redistributed or retransmitted, in whole or in part, or in any form or manner, without the express written consent of J.P. Morgan. Any unauthorized use or disclosure is prohibited. Receipt and review of this information constitutes your agreement not to redistribute or retransmit the contents and information contained in this communication without first obtaining express permission from an authorized officer of J.P. Morgan. © 2026, JPMorganChase & Co. All rights reserved.

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Segment 1 (00:00 - 05:00)

Welcome to JP Morgan's Making Sense. I'm Maya Crook, senior research analyst on the global economic research team. I'm joined today by senior economist Mike Hansen to discuss the takeaways from the March US CPI report and where we see inflation going from here. Mike, thanks so much for joining us. — Thanks for having me. — So, let's get into it. The March CPI report showed headline inflation up 0. 9% on the month, the largest monthly increase since early 2022. This was driven by an 11% jump in energy prices, a result of the supply shortages stemming from the Middle East conflict. Core inflation, which strips out energy and food, rose a more modest 2% on the month with the year ago rate ticking up to 2. 6%. Mike, what were your biggest takeaways from the report? Yeah, I think you highlighted what were the kind of the key things that we saw and that we were looking for. And the first is that there was a very large increase in energy prices. Uh and that was really as expected given what's happened in the Middle East. And the second and I'm sure we'll talk about this a little bit more in a minute. The core measure which you as you mentioned excludes food and energy was a little bit softer than we had anticipated. Um but you know I would not take a strong signal from that at this point. uh you know we are still concerned that you're likely to see some continued firmness on the inflation numbers even outside of what's happening with uh the energy numbers — and on the energy front how are the data tracking so far for the month of April — yeah so I think it's useful to put this in context the most important input for energy CPI is gasoline prices not surprisingly and those average about $2. 93 in February before they jump to $3. 71 on average for March March. And for April, we're about a week and a half in. We're tracking a little bit more than $410 a gallon. So, you're going to continue to see some upward movement there. We're tracking roughly a little bit shy of 2. 5%. So, obviously not the 11% which I would say we did nail uh in terms of the forecast, but it's still a bit of an ad. You're going to see prices come off a bit from the $100 per barrel plus prices you're seeing right now, but they're almost certainly going to remain elevated relative to where we were before the conflict began. And the Middle East conflict is also raising prices for a number of other commodities that would normally be flowing through the straight of Hormuse. An increase in fertilizer prices in particular is raising concerns for upside risks to food inflation. Were there any signs of that in the March report? — I think the short answer is no. And that's not surprising because the feed through from fertilizer prices into food prices takes some time. Uh in particular, it might not show up until the next growing season. But we saw specifically if you look at food at home which is effectively groceries uh that actually was down 210 uh on the month food away from home which is restaurants and the like and really reflects much more the cost of labor uh and the cost of advertising the cost of renting the space uh and not the raw food input that was up 210. So you're very hardressed to see a big jump in food certainly nothing like what we saw in energy. — Gotcha. And now stepping towards core inflation which strips out energy and food prices. This is obviously what the Fed targets when they're setting their policy rates. Was there any evidence that higher energy prices were feeding through into core inflation last month? — Yeah. So I think it's worth highlighting um central bankers do eat and drive. So they do pay attention to headline as well as core. But the reason for focusing on core uh amongst economists widely whether they're you know working at a central bank or working at a place like JP Morgan is that the volatility certainly we've seen recently in things like food and energy prices is typically not representative of where inflation is going over the medium term. Um so with that context you didn't actually see I would say a lot of clear evidence that energy prices were feeding through. The one place where you see it most immediately is in the price of airfares. That was up uh 2. 7% on the month. And that sounds like a strong number, but over the last several months, it's been higher than that on average because you've just seen a real uh post-pandemic reopening surge in demand for travel, particularly, I think, amongst higher income households. Uh and so that number has actually been even firmer in recent months. So, it's not clear that you were getting a big pass through effect right away. The other place you might think about where there could be pass through is in like shipping costs and then that would show up in goods prices. But again, probably a bit of a lag. Uh, and that's going to make it, I'm sure we'll talk about this, a little bit harder to disentangle what part of higher goods prices might still be the pass through from tariffs as opposed to what might be shipping costs. But it's important to recognize that higher gasoline prices in particular are a drag on consumers purchasing power. And so you're going to substitute away for demand for other goods and services

Segment 2 (05:00 - 10:00)

to pay for your gasoline because demand is what economists call pretty inelastic. It doesn't really react to the price. You're going to pay whatever you have to pay to get to work or to, you know, run the kids to school, get groceries, etc. Uh which means you're going to cut back elsewhere and weaker demand does put downward pressure on inflation all being equal. So these things tend to offset. If you look at studies uh over longer periods of time, there's not a lot of evidence of pass through into core. So, we'll have to of course monitor it in the current situation, but the fact that you didn't see really clear evidence of it this time is not that surprising. — Okay. And you mentioned um the impact of tariffs. Now, before the conflict, we had been tracking this, the impact uh on core goods prices specifically. Back in February, if uh people can remember pre-conlict times, the Supreme Court decided to repeal AIPA. That lowered the effective tariff rate from around 10% to closer to 7%. But you and the team have been arguing that tariffs are continuing to pass through to inflation and push up core goods prices. Did we learn anything new on that front? — Arguably, no, we didn't learn anything new. Uh core goods prices were actually a little bit soft, I think, relative expectations, up about 210 on the month. We've seen a lot of communication though from uh tariff impacted businesses that this year they will likely continue to pass through some of those costs onto consumers. So that's the main reason we think that we're probably not yet done with those tariff impacts, but it could very well be gradual. Uh, and there's going to be obviously this challenge where demand for other goods outside of energy could be somewhat softer and that may limit the ability to firms to pass through tariffs quite as extensively as we might have first thought. I think in the end, whether it's an energy price pass through or a tariff price pass through, we're probably still going to get something there. — Mhm. Okay. And turning to the other component in core services inflation. Um, and I want to specifically focus on core services x shelter or so-called super core, which is often used as a measure of underlying inflation pressures. That's been uncomfortably sticky in recent reports. Was there anything in this basket that stood out to you in March? — I would argue the thing that was most interesting in the March print was the dog that didn't bark through medical inflation, which was not as high as you might have thought. If you looked at the increase in uh prices for physicians and other professional medical services that was up 510 and that's a decently firm number and hospitals uh were up a softer 210 but the number overall in medical I think was weaker than a lot of people were expecting because of this kind of funky way the technical term for how we measure uh medical inflation in the CPI. — Okay, gotcha. And last week we also got PCE inflation data for the month of February. PCE is the Fed's preferred inflation measure and it's been running well above CPI lately. Uh core PCE is running at a roughly 4 and a half annualized pace versus the 3% pace in core CPI. What's been driving the gap between these two measures and how does the Fed square these two differing signals? — Yeah, great question. So just to remind folks who may be a little less familiar with some of the lingo, the PCE is the personal consumption expenditure deflator and it's really a broader measure in some sense of the prices that are affecting consumers. The CPI measures effectively just outofpocket expenses. Uh the PCE on the other hand is all expenses on behalf of consumers. So if your firm is paying for your medical care or if you're getting some uh say public assistance or charity, those are included in the PC but not in the CPI. That's not the source of the difference though. What's really interesting is I think a lot of people have been presuming that services is the key difference and the logic is half correct. So part of it is this idea that you're seeing a really significant slowdown in shelter inflation and shelter has more than twice the weight in the measurement of the CPI versus the PCE. And so uh if it's coming down it's going to make PC look higher than CPI. I think there's some truth to that but I think that case is overstated. Uh I don't think it's coming down quite as quickly as some people have been expecting or hoping. Uh, another piece is medical care and again insurance plays a bigger role here and it does look like insurance costs are probably higher in the PCE than the CPI. But if you just do a simple goods versus services split, the big difference is largely in goods. — Uh, and there's some weird idiosyncratic things. So software is growing at a 10 or 20 times in the PC what it is in the CPI. And we've asked the Bureau of Labor Statistics to explain that. We haven't really quite figured that one out just yet. — Um, and there's a handful of other things. auto prices have a larger share in the CPI versus the PCE and auto prices surprisingly despite the tariffs have actually generally been coming down. So that will also make the PC look a little bit firmer. So it's a range of things to be perfectly honest is not one simple thing. Um it's not the

Segment 3 (10:00 - 15:00)

obvious smoking gum that some people point to. Um but it could persist and that will be relevant for the Fed because the Fed does think that PCE is the better measure of inflation when push comes to shove. That's after all why they're targeting it. Uh and with that running pretty firm uh and likely to remain, you know, well above the Fed's 2% target for the foreseeable future, it does put a lot of caution into Fed officials around the inflation outlook, particularly now that we've run five plus years of inflation well above target. Uh, I think Fed officials are cautious about letting inflation persist at a high level for such a long period of time because it gets embedded in inflation expectations and then it becomes much more difficult and potentially much more costly to ring inflation out of people's expectations. — I see. So CPI is more timely, but in terms of Fed implications, we should be looking to the PCE. — I think that's right. I mean, you know, the Fed always looks at every data they can get their hands on. Sure, because it's, you know, there's never one measure that tells you the whole truth about the economy. — As do we. — Indeed, as do we. But I would say that the PCE is the one that they are most focused on when it comes to inflation. — Okay. And now putting this all together, what's the inflation outlook for the rest of the year? — Right. So, we typically think of inflation in uh 12-month changes or kind of year ago changes. And that's how it's typically recorded because it can be volatile from month to month. And if we think about uh over the four quarters to the end of this year, we are currently looking for headline CPI inflation which includes food energy to be running about three and a half%. Uh and core to be a little bit below that, just a touch below three. PC is going to be very similar within a tenth. So I think 34 for the headline and three for uh the core measure. So again, three is not two and so that is a challenge for the Fed for sure. — Okay. Gotcha. — Let me turn the question over to you for a second. In terms of the March inflation data, the US obviously had a very strong headline number, but maybe a little more moderate core. What are we seeing elsewhere in other particularly developed markets on the inflation numbers for March? Well, I will caveat and say that as of recording, we have very limited data for the developed markets, but globally March uh inflation is kind of a similar story as to the US. Globally, uh March headline inflation is tracking a. 7 increase uh the largest monthly gain since 2022. Just like the US, the global headline number was pushed up by a jump in energy prices, which will likely push inflation up to a roughly 5% annualized pace this quarter. That said, we are encouraged by the fact that core inflation remained broadly steady. Global core prices are tracking a roughly2% increase last month. That's keeping the underlying pace of inflation around 3% annualized. That should give central banks some comfort and allow them to move cautiously as they balance these dual-sided risks to growth and inflation from the Middle East conflict. — Great. So, we talked a bit about the Fed and how it might react. What are we thinking about how other central banks will react to the inflationary impulse coming from events in the Middle East? — Yeah, so globally our central bank calls are broadly less hawkish than market expectations. In the EM, the fact that the Fed is expected to remain on hold is actually giving other central bankers space to remain patient, keeping rates on hold while keeping an eye on core inflation and inflation expectations. The story is different in Western Europe where we broadly expect hikes as central banks have expressed greater concern around second round effects on inflation and around an impact of higher energy prices on inflation expectations. And Mike, as I mentioned, uh the Fed outlook is quite an important input for a lot of central bankers, particularly in the EM. So, bringing it back to you, what is the Fed outlook for the rest of the year? How do we think they'll balance these upside risks to inflation from higher energy costs with the downside risks to growth from a purchasing power squeeze? — It's a great question. I think it comes down to timing and then magnitudes. So, if the oil supply disruption were to clear up relatively quickly, then you wouldn't have that much of an inflation shock and a purchasing power shock. And the Fed could probably largely look through that because the inflation shock would be temporary, right? So, um, even if energy prices say settle at $100 a barrel for oil and $4 a gallon for gasoline, once you've settled and you stay there for a while, you're not adding to inflation. Of course, inflation is the rate of change. So, the inflation impact tends to be very front-loaded, very immediate. And then even if prices remain elevated, and that could of course weigh on purchasing power, it doesn't really add anything else to inflation. But the longer that we remain with elevated prices, the more the purchasing power

Segment 4 (15:00 - 16:00)

hit to consumers really starts to matter. And I think that's where the Fed is going to have their focus. If we continue to see elevated costs for energy and perhaps some other goods because of the conflict in the Middle East, the concern over time for the Fed will be building around weakness in consumer demand. And ironically perhaps that's ultimately disinflationary, right? If people are buying less stuff, the firms will not have the ability to hike prices nearly as rapidly as they might otherwise. So I think for Fed officials, it comes down to seeing how long does the shock last, how high do prices get, and tried to get their handle around or get a handle around how big of a drag on consumers it is. But that latter one is probably the dominant one. So in the debate whether the Fed should be hiking or cutting in response to an energy shock, unless the Fed loses credibility, inflation expectations become unhinged, like we hinted at earlier, it's probably more likely the Fed's going to be worried in a sustained shock environment about the downside risk to growth and therefore is likely to consider whether they might need to cut rates to cushion that shock to consumers. — Well, Mike, we've covered a lot. Um, I think that's a good place for us to wrap up. Thank you so much for your time. — Thank you. Thanks for listening to JP Morgan's Making Sense. If you've enjoyed this conversation, share your feedback by leaving a comment or review wherever you listen to podcasts and be sure to follow our channel so you don't miss an episode. This communication is provided for information purposes only. Please visit www. jpm. com/ressearch/disclosures for important disclosures. Copyright 2026 JP Morgan Chase and Co. All rights reserved.

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