U.S. Inflation Cools in May as Energy and Core Prices Fall, Supporting Dovish

Energy Index Down 1% as Gasoline and Natural Gas Weaken
The energy index was a key drag on headline inflation, falling 1.0% in May. Gasoline prices fell 2.6%, while natural gas declined 1.0%. On a 12-month basis, energy prices are down 3.5%, driven largely by a 12% drop in gasoline and an 8.6% decline in fuel oil. Electricity, in contrast, increased 0.9% in May and 4.5% over the year. The softness in energy may provide relief for consumers but could suppress inflation expectations.
Food and Shelter Support Headline CPI
The food index rose 0.3% in May, rebounding from a 0.1% decline in April. Both food at home and food away from home increased by 0.3%, with full-service and limited-service meals contributing evenly. Over the past year, food prices climbed 2.9%, with sharp gains in eggs (+41.5%) and meat categories supporting the uptrend. Shelter, which accounts for a large share of the CPI basket, continued its steady climb, up 0.3% monthly and 3.9% annually.
Fed Outlook: Inflation Pressure Contained, Eyes on Tariffs
The weaker-than-expected core CPI print supports the Federal Reserve’s cautious stance on rates, especially with tariffs yet to exert broad pricing pressure. Recent comments from Fed officials suggest concern over potential future inflation from trade policy, but so far, the data shows muted pass-through. Market pricing may shift slightly more dovish as the Fed evaluates risks to growth and price stability.
Market Forecast: Slightly Bullish for Bonds, Neutral for Dollar
With inflation undershooting expectations, traders may find support for Treasuries in the near term, pushing yields lower. The dollar is likely to remain range-bound as the Fed’s rate path remains data-dependent. Equity markets may interpret the data positively, expecting sustained consumer spending with limited cost pressure.
This article was originally published by a www.fxempire.com
Read it HERE