
Wholesale prices plunge by most since 2020 despite Trump tariffs
US wholesale prices dropped unexpectedly in April for the first time in more than a year despite President Trump's sweeping taxes on imports.
The producer price index — which tracks inflation before it hits consumers — fell 0.5% last month from March, the first drop since October 2023 and the biggest in five years. Compared to a year earlier, producer prices rose 2.4% last month, decelerating from a 3.4% year-over-year gain in March, the Labor Department reported Thursday.
Excluding volatile food and energy prices, so-called core wholesale prices dipped 0.4% from March and rose 3.1% from a year earlier.
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The producer price index — which tracks inflation before it hits consumers — fell 0.5% last month from March, the first drop since October 2023 and the biggest in five years.
AP
Economists had forecast that producer prices rose modestly in April.
Services prices fell 0.7%, the biggest drop in government records going back to 2009, on shrinking profit margins at wholesalers and retailers. Wholesale food prices fell 1%, and egg prices plunged 39%, though they are still up nearly 45% from a year ago because of bird flu.
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On Tuesday, the Labor Department reported that consumer prices rose just 2.3% last month from April 2024 — smallest year-over-year gain in more than four years.
Economists have predicted that Trump's tariffs would drive up prices, and many expect the impact to show up in June or July.
Still, Trump's tariffs are ever-changing, so it's hard to forecast their economic impact. On Monday, for instance, Trump unexpectedly agreed to a massive de-escalation of his trade war with China — third-biggest source of US imports — by scaling back his taxes on Chinese products to 30% from 145%; China slashed its retaliatory tariffs on US products from 125% to 10%.
Economists have predicted that President Trump's tariffs would drive up prices, and many expect the impact to show up in June or July. Above, the president in in Qatar on Thursday.
AP
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'Tariffs have yet to make much of a mark on pricing, though it's likely just a matter of time,'' Sal Guatieri, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets, wrote in a commentary.

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