Government + Policy

Consumer Prices Reached a 40-Year High in June as Inflation Storm Rumbles On

The June inflation reading was the highest since 1981, leading some market experts to believe the Fed could continue tightening monetary policy at an accelerated pace
July 14, 2022
2 min read

June marked the fourth straight month for inflation above an 8% rate as consumer prices soared to a 40-year high, according to NAHB Eye on Housing. June’s inflation rate constituted the largest year-over-year gain since November 1981 as both the energy and shelter index recorded their largest yearly increases since April 1980 and February 1991. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 1.3% in June on a seasonally adjusted basis following an increase of 1.0% in May. The latest CPI jump marks the biggest monthly increase since September 2005.

Persistent gains could force the Federal Reserve to raise rates at an even more aggressive pace, and some experts believe a 75 basis point increase could be possible for the next round of rate hikes.

While the increase was broad-based, the indexes for gasoline, shelter, and food were the largest contributors to the increase in the headline CPI in June. After rising 3.9% in May, the energy index rose by 7.5% in June with the gasoline and natural gas index rising 11.2% and 8.2%, the largest monthly increase in natural gas index since October 2005. Meanwhile, both food and food at home index rose by 1.0% in June.

Other major component indexes also continued to rise in June. The indexes for shelter (+0.6%), used cars and trucks (1.6%), medical care (0.7%), motor vehicle insurance (1.9%) and new vehicles (0.7%).

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