The latest U.S. Producer Price Index (PPI) release delivered an upside surprise, reinforcing concerns that inflation pressures at the wholesale level remain sticky as the new year begins.
Data published this morning, Friday, January 30, 2026, showed producer prices rising faster than economists expected, complicating the outlook for near-term monetary easing.
The index for total final demand increased 0.5% month-over-month in December, clearly above the 0.3% consensus estimate. On an annual basis, PPI held steady at 3.0% year-over-year, matching November’s pace but exceeding forecasts calling for a moderation toward 2.8%.
Core PPI, which excludes food and energy, also firmed. It rose 0.3% on the month, a notable acceleration from the prior 0.0% reading, suggesting that underlying price pressures are no longer easing as smoothly as markets had hoped.
Taken together, the data point to a slower disinflation process at the producer level, increasing the risk that elevated costs could continue feeding through to consumer prices in coming months.
Financial markets reacted quickly to the hotter-than-expected print. The 2-year U.S. Treasury yield pushed higher, climbing to 3.561%, as traders reassessed the probability of aggressive rate cuts if inflation remains stubborn.
Equity futures, already under pressure following news surrounding Kevin Warsh and his expected nomination as Federal Reserve Chair, stayed firmly in the red. The PPI data reinforced the idea that the Federal Reserve may have less flexibility to ease policy quickly without risking a resurgence in inflation.
The U.S. dollar also strengthened on the release, consistent with historical patterns where higher-than-expected inflation supports expectations for relatively tighter monetary policy.
While PPI is only one piece of the inflation puzzle, the December report adds to a growing body of evidence that price pressures are proving more resilient than anticipated. If similar strength appears in upcoming consumer inflation data, the Federal Reserve may be forced to maintain a more cautious stance on rate cuts, even as growth risks and market volatility rise.
For investors, the message is clear: inflation is not yet fully under control, and macro data surprises remain a key driver of cross-asset volatility as 2026 unfolds.
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