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Inflation Monitor: Goods Take Driver's Seat

The prices of goods are rising at the fastest rate in years, complicating the Federal Reserve's task as it waits to assess the impact of the largest oil-supply disruption in history.
April 23, 2026

The inflation story got a new wrinkle just ahead of the war in Iran. Goods prices became the dominant inflationary force, taking over from services, which had fueled the bulk of price gains for about three years, according to the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index, the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge.

As Fed policymakers await the next round of inflation data, starting April 30, they'll be considering more than just the impact of the largest oil-supply disruption in history. In February, before the war started, the price of goods on a three-month annualized basis hit 4.5%, the highest since the inflation spike of 2021–2022, and higher than any rate seen in the five years before that. Durable goods prices soared 8.3% on a three-month annualized basis, which measures what annual inflation would be if prices kept rising at the same rate for a year.

Overall, the price of goods accounted for 57% of the 0.4% month-over-month increase in the headline PCE index in February (the latest PCE data available as of mid-April). Prior to that, services had driven at least 50% of PCE inflation in nearly every month since the end of 2022.

In February 2026, the Personal Consumption Expenditures price index showed the three-month annual rate of change in the prices of goods and durable goods, 4.5 % and 8.3%, hit their highest levels since 2022. These levels are well above the Fed's 2% inflation rate target.

Data source: Bureau of Economic Analysis

Services could quickly overtake goods again. The PCE services "supercore," which excludes energy and housing, has remained above 3% ever since the 2021 inflation spike. In February, it was 3.2%. But at the very least, the resurgence in goods prices, which Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said are tariff-driven, and possibly transitory, comes at a time when services prices remain a persistent concern and elevated prices for oil, natural gas, and other commodities may soon start filtering downstream into a wide range of products and services.

The PCE price index shows that supercore services prices, which exclude energy and housing, have yet to retreat to pre-COVID levels, registering 3.2% in February, which surpasses the Fed's 2% inflation target.

Data source: Bureau of Economic Analysis

Aside from higher gas prices and airline tickets, the oil-supply shock hadn't yet materially affected consumers as of March, the most recent month for which inflation data was available. But the Producer Price Index (PPI) showed that upstream businesses are feeling the pain, whether from tariffs or oil prices, and they may decide to pass it on to consumers.

In fact, the PPI shows that goods prices at the producer level have been trending steadily higher since 2023. In March, prices for intermediate-demand processed goods—two levels up the supply chain from consumer products—jumped 6.6% from a year earlier, the biggest increase since 2022. They rose a still-elevated 5.1% even when excluding food and energy prices.

A 10-year chart of producer prices for intermediate-demand processed goods and intermediate-demand processed goods that exclude food and energy shows both have been trending steadily higher since 2023, reaching a three-year high in March 2026.

Data source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

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