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(Reuters) -The Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index increased 0.3% in February after advancing by an unrevised 0.3% in January, the U.S. Commerce Department said on Friday. Economists ...
Tariffs are looming, inflation is still sticky and US consumers are bracing themselves for the impact. That’s according to data released Friday from the Commerce Department: Americans socked away ...
The Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index (PCE), the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation metric over the past 25 years, came in hotter than expected recently and Wall Street wasn't pleased.
The Commerce Department released the February personal consumption expenditures (PCE) index, which showed that inflation remains above the Federal Reserve's 2% goal.
The core personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index, the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation measure, ticked up last month, rising more than economists had forecast and signaling that ...
rose in February more than forecast based on a reading Friday from the personal-consumption-expenditures price index. The PCE report also showed the rise in spending last month was slightly less ...
A Commerce Department report showed the Personal Consumption Expenditures Price index – the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge – rose in line with what economists polled by Reuters ...
US stocks tanked on Friday as Wall Street grappled with President Trump's escalating trade war and weighed signs of ...
Coming up: fresh data on inflation, consumer sentiment, the housing market, and earnings from GameStop, Chewy, Dollar Tree, Lululemon, and more.
The major indexes were sharply lower near noon as investors react to the release of key inflation data and recent trade ...