New York Fed inflation measure heats up in December?

BY Reuters | ECONOMIC | 02/23/26 01:12 PM EST

By Michael S. Derby

Feb 23 (Reuters) - The underlying level of inflation heated up in December as measured by a New York Federal Reserve gauge, suggesting further challenges in getting overall price pressures back to the U.S. central bank's 2% target.

The regional Fed bank said its Multivariate Core Trend ?inflation reading ticked up to 2.8% in December from 2.4% ?in the prior month, boosted by pressures in prices for services outside of housing and by goods costs.

Fed officials are expecting price pressures ?to retreat this year as President Donald Trump's system of large-scale increases in import tariffs exerts ?a less dramatic impact on inflation.

Much of the overshoot of the central ?bank's inflation target has been ?attributed to Trump's tariffs, and concerns about price pressures have caused a number of Fed officials to oppose interest rate cuts ?even as the job market has softened.

The Fed lowered ?its benchmark overnight interest rate by three-quarters of a percentage point last year to the 3.5%-3.75% range, a level it maintained at its January 27-28 meeting. Markets expect ?the central bank to cut rates again this ?year, although Fed ?officials have provided little guidance about the prospects for further easing.

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In an appearance on Friday in New York, Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan, who was ?skeptical of the rate cuts delivered last year given the persistence of inflation over the ?target, said she was "cautiously optimistic" that given where monetary policy is now set, "we're on a path to for inflation to come back down toward our target."

"My expectation is that some of the tariff effects, particularly in goods inflation, will start to fade," as a "roughly balanced" job market helps other parts of inflation ?cool, Logan ?said.

She noted that the Trimmed Mean Personal Consumption Expenditures rate, another alternative measure ?of inflation produced by the Dallas Fed, is moving in a more favorable direction.

That gauge seeks to ?better measure inflation by factoring out the biggest positive and negative price changes in a given month. On a year-over-year basis, that reading has steadily cooled to 2.4% in December from 2.8% in August.

But the Trimmed Mean PCE jumped to 2.2% in December versus 1.7% in November on a month-over-month basis.

The centrality of Trump's tax increases in driving up inflation grew more uncertain after the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday struck down many of his tariffs. ?The president responded by announcing major new tax increases and potential fees on imports.

The Trump administration has claimed repeatedly that its tax increases are helping the economy. A recent New York Fed report showed the ?tariffs, contrary to the administration's claims, are ?in fact almost entirely borne by U.S. importers and consumers.

(Reporting by Michael ?S. Derby; Editing by Paul Simao)

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