On March 13, 2026, the Bureau of Economic Analysis published the latest personal consumption expenditures (PCE) inflation report for January, providing critical insights into the United States’ inflation landscape. PCE figures are the Federal Reserve’s preferred metric for assessing underlying price pressures, directly shaping expectations around monetary policy moves.
Core PCE and Broader Inflation Trends
Annual core PCE inflation, which removes often-volatile food and energy components, reached 3.1% in January. This marks a modest acceleration from December’s 3.0% result and remains well above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target. On a monthly basis, core PCE rose 0.4%, fully in line with consensus forecasts from economists.
The overall PCE inflation gauge, tracking all consumer price categories, recorded annual growth of 2.8%. While slightly below analyst projections of 2.9%, this number still points to persisting inflationary momentum. Month-on-month, headline PCE increased 0.3%, mirroring market expectations and indicating steady consumer price trends at the start of 2026.
Federal Reserve Policy Implications
With headline and core PCE measures consistently above the desired 2% ceiling, markets now broadly anticipate that the Federal Reserve will hold its benchmark interest rate at the 3.5% to 3.75% range in its upcoming policy meeting. This approach reflects officials’ caution amid ongoing inflation headwinds and underscores a reluctance to move toward rate cuts in the immediate term.
Differences between inflation readings from PCE and the Labor Department’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) have become more pronounced in recent months. PCE’s methodology places more weight on healthcare, which has seen accelerated cost growth, and less on moderated shelter costs, explaining its relatively higher inflation prints. CPI for February recorded a year-over-year rate of 2.4%, noticeably lower than PCE’s tally.
The Bureau of Economic Analysis, an agency within the U.S. Department of Commerce, compiles the PCE index each month to gauge how changing prices impact household spending. Its comprehensive scope and dynamic weighting make it a favored reference for monetary authorities seeking to assess economic overheating or resilience.
A statement from Paul Ashworth, Chief North America Economist at Capital Economics, emphasized the complicated effects of recent energy market shifts.
He indicated that while increased crude prices may threaten consumer budgets, America’s net petroleum exporter role could soften some inflation impacts, though positive investment spillovers would likely emerge only after a delay.
Ashworth also suggested that broader conditions, such as the lingering effects of a late 2025 government shutdown and evolving geopolitical tensions, are set to shape the trajectory of first-quarter economic activity through early 2026.
Additionally, the ongoing military conflict in Iran, which escalated after late-February U.S. and Israeli aerial operations, has driven crude oil costs higher, but the ramifications of these developments remain absent from January’s PCE snapshot. Markets now grapple with elevated uncertainty as energy prices and potential wider inflation spillovers develop in real time.
A notable element in the recent data was the upward surprise in monthly personal consumption expenditures, climbing 0.4% in January against expectations, while personal income increases moderated during the same period. Fourth-quarter 2025 GDP growth was revised sharply downward to 0.7%, highlighting a delicate economic balance ahead of the Fed’s much-anticipated rate meeting.



