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PCE Report Shows Consumer Prices Rose Slightly in September

The New York TimesDecember 05, 2025 at 4:45 PMFull Content
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Gist

The September PCE report shows moderate inflation rise, flat real spending, and mixed signals for Fed rate cuts amid ongoing inflation concerns and weakening labor trends.

LLM Summary

The September PCE inflation data showed a 0.3% monthly increase and a 2.8% year-over-year rise, in line with expectations. Real consumer spending was flat, indicating inflation is eroding purchasing power. Fed officials remain divided, with some emphasizing employment risks, while inflation remains above target.

Full Article Content

U.S. Economy

Consumer prices increased moderately in September. The Personal Consumption Expenditures price index, which is the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge, showed a 0.3 percent monthly increase in prices.

Compared with the same time last year, prices were up 2.8 percent, a slightly faster pace than in August, when the year-over-year rate was 2.7 percent. Both the monthly and annual readings for September were in line with analyst expectations.

Consumer spending, the lifeblood of the U.S. economy in several ways, continued to hold up but was flat on an inflation-adjusted basis. Personal income increased $94.5 billion overall, registering a solid 0.4 percent monthly rate of growth.

The data is several months old because of the government shutdown, which prevented data collection from taking place. But the numbers will provide the Fed with more data to consider at its policy meeting next week.

For now, market pricing and recent commentary from Fed officials themselves suggests the central bank is likely to cut interest rates.

Goods inflation, after easing substantially since 2022, has swung back up since spring.

Core inflation, which excludes more volatile energy and food prices, came in at 2.8 percent for September and at 0.2 percent on a monthly basis, unchanged from August. Inflation-adjusted “real” consumer spending was flat, a sign of how recent inflation has been eating into household purchasing power.

Still, minutes from a recent Fed meeting showed “most judged that it likely would be appropriate to ease policy further over the remainder of this year,” and that most officials “generally judged” that “downside risks to employment were elevated and had increased.”

Inflation has generally been above the Fed’s official 2 percent target since 2021. Hawkish economic analysts, who are worried about a 3 percent rate of overall inflation becoming the new norm, have emphasized the risks of easing interest rate policy too soon — especially when there are fresh anxieties over whether asset prices are in a bubble.

And yet labor market data shows that while unemployment is still low, hiring levels have substantially deteriorated. Jobless claims, which are measured weekly state by state, have been remarkably low and steady. But new private sector payroll data from ADP has noted a worrying falloff in new hires.

A range of Fed officials, including Christopher J. Waller, a Fed governor and Susan Collins, who heads the Boston Fed, have said that they plan to be highly attentive to the employment side of their institution’s dual mandate of containing inflation and promoting full employment.

“Inflation dynamics are not friendly to American households at the current time,” said Joseph Brusuelas, chief economist for the accounting firm RSM. “My sense here is that the economy in the fourth quarter is just not going to look good; not just because of the government shutdown, but because the long tail of inflation over these years is whipping the consumer into a scared corner.”

Talmon Joseph Smith is a Times economics reporter, based in New York.