U.S. Inflation Cooled in February as Fed Faces Rising Prices, Bank Failures

Consumer prices rise 6% from year earlier, smallest annual gain since September 2021

As inflation climbs in the U.S., rising food and energy costs have pushed the nation’s most popular price index to its highest level in four decades. WSJ’s Gwynn Guilford explains how the consumer-price index works and what it can tell you about inflation. Illustration: Jacob Reynolds

Elevated inflation cooled modestly in February, as the Federal Reserve faces dual threats of rising prices and financial instability.

The consumer-price index, a closely watched inflation gauge, rose 6% in February from a year earlier, versus a 6.4% gain the prior month, the Labor Department said Tuesday, the slowest pace since September 2021. The smaller increase comes as the Fed contemplates its next interest rate move while confronting price pressures and bank failures.

What's News

Continue reading your article with
a WSJ subscription

Subscribe Now

Already a subscriber? Sign In

Sponsored Offers
  • TurboTax:
    TurboTax service code 2023 - $15 off
  • The Motley Fool:
    Sign up to Stock Advisor for $79 for 1 year
  • H&R Block Tax:
    15% Off DIY Online Tax Filing Services | H&R Block Coupon Code
  • Top Resume:
    10% TopResume Discount Code for expert resume-writing services
  • eBay:
    30% off eBay coupon
  • Groupon:
    Groupon Promo Code - 30% Off