January CPI Signals Cooling Inflation, But Core Pressures Remain Stubborn
The January 2026 Consumer Price Index paints a familiar but complex picture: headline inflation is easing, but core inflation, especially in services and housing, remains stubbornly elevated.
Here’s what the data tell us:
- January headline CPI likely rose about 0.3% month-over-month, with year-over-year inflation easing to around 2.4%–2.5%, down from 2.7% in December. This suggests a slowing trend but with ongoing monthly price momentum typical of a “January effect” linked to start-of-year price resets.
- Core CPI, which strips out volatile food and energy, is expected around 0.3% MoM and 2.5% YoY, only a slight dip from December’s 2.6% annual pace, signaling persistent price pressure in services and housing.
- Key inflation drivers remain shelter and housing costs, wage-driven services, and utilities, while gasoline prices and core goods continue to ease.
- The absence of October’s official CPI data due to the federal shutdown complicates trend analysis. Many October figures were estimated rather than observed, making month-to-month comparisons noisier and potentially understating near-term inflation, especially in housing and services. As real data re-enter the series, inflation readings may be revised upward.
What does this mean for markets and policy?
- Disinflation is underway but incomplete. Headline inflation is drifting lower, but sticky services inflation tied to wages and housing keeps core CPI elevated.
- The Fed is likely to remain cautious, balancing progress with persistent inflation pockets and data uncertainties.
- Investors should watch forward-looking indicators closely: shelter inflation lags, wage growth trends, energy price volatility, and upcoming data revisions.
Bottom line: Inflation is moving in the right direction, but the path to the Fed’s 2% target will be uneven and data-dependent. Understanding the nuances behind the headline numbers, and the October data gap, is critical for navigating the months ahead.
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