AP News49%
Inflation cools more than expected in June as gas costs fall, underlying prices ease 46%
By Christopher Rugaber58%
7/14/2026, 4:01:06 AM
BS Summary: This article contains 25 faulty reasoning types, including Confirmation Bias, Optimism Bias, and Appeal to Authority, with Availability Heuristic as the most egregious example at 12.8% saturation with 81 hits. Analysis detected 834 faulty-reasoning hits from 631 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 48.1% and a BS Rank of 46% (8,663 of 15,784 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 54.90% of the article peer group.
U.S. inflation cooled last month as the cost of gas, clothes, and used cars fell, providing some relief to consumers, while underlying price pressures also slowed more than expected.
Consumer prices dropped 0.4% from May to June, the largest monthly drop in four years, the Labor Department said Tuesday, after rising 0.5% in the previous month.
On a yearly basis, inflation declined to 3.5%, down from a year-over-year gain of 4.2% in May and lower than many economists expected.
Excluding the food and energy categories, core prices were unchanged from May to June, a positive sign that underlying inflation is declining.
On a yearly basis, core prices rose just 2.6%, down from 2.9% the previous month.
Core inflation remains above the Federal Reserve’s target of 2%.
The core figures suggest that the gas price spike from the Iran war, while it pushed up airfares and some other costs, hasn’t so far led to broad-based, sustained inflation, economists said.
“This reading is very much in the camp that the inflation we’ve had this year is transitory,” said Michael Metcalfe, head of macro strategy at State Street Markets.
“Yes, gas prices went up, but nothing else did, more or less.”
Yet oil prices rose for a second day Tuesday as the United States renewed attacks on Iran and President Donald Trump announced a new blockade in the Strait of Hormuz, a key shipping route for about one-fifth of the world’s oil.
The increase threatens to undo at least some of the progress that occurred last month.
“Today’s number is a very good reading, but so much is going to depend on what happens in the Middle East,” Bostjancic said.
Benign report could make Fed rate hike less likely
Tuesday’s report likely reduces pressure on the Fed to boost its short-term interest rate to combat inflation.
Last month, Fed officials left their key rate unchanged at about 3.6%.
Many Fed officials have flagged massive investments in the build out of artificial intelligence infrastructure as a factor that could worsen inflation by pushing up prices for memory chips and other semiconductors, as well as electricity.
With chips so much more expensive, companies like Apple, Microsoft, and Dell have announced price increases for laptops, tablets, and video game consoles.
Other Fed officials have offered conflicting views on what steps the Fed could take next.
On Monday, Fed governor Christopher Waller said he was worried about core inflation, which he noted had risen from 3% last December to 3.4% in May, according to the Fed’s preferred measure.
He pointed out that the cost of more than two-thirds of services have risen by 3% or more compared with a year ago.
“If we get another hot reading on core inflation this week, then the (Fed) will need to consider tightening monetary policy in the near term,” Waller said in a speech in New York.
But last week John Williams, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, said that if core inflation stays at a 0.2% monthly pace for the rest of this year, the Fed could avoid hiking rates.
Tuesday’s data is along the lines of what Williams wants to see.
Next steps
Other signs of where prices are headed are mixed.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York said last week that a survey found that nearly half the companies in its region that have paid tariffs still plan to lift their prices further.
Separately, Walmart last week said it was rolling back prices on thousands of items, including ground beef, potato chips, toys, and clothes.
Trump praised the move on social media and sought to take credit for the reduction, though the company did not mention Trump in its announcement.
Analysis
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