Advertisement

Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Wednesday, August 13, 2025

U.S. consumer prices increased moderately in July, though rising costs for services such as airline fares and some tariff-sensitive goods like household furniture caused a measure of underlying inflation to post its largest gain in six months.

More

Alternate links: Google News | Twitter

Breaking News: U.S. consumer prices rose 2.7% in July from a year ago, as President Trump's tariffs intensified price pressures.

[image or embed]

-- The New York Times (@nytimes.com) Aug 12, 2025 at 8:47 AM

Comments

Admin's note: Participants in this discussion must follow the site's moderation policy. Profanity will be filtered. Abusive conduct is not allowed.

More from the article...

... Economists, however, cautioned that higher prices from President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs were still coming. They argued that businesses continued to sell merchandise accumulated before the import duties came into effect. ...

"Investors might want to hold back on the no-inflation celebration, however, because the goods sitting on store shelves arrived on boats months ago and the tariff hikes have yet to be applied to the goods on ships steaming the consumers' way right now," said Christopher Rupkey, chief economist at FWDBONDS ...

The CPI rose 0.2% last month after a gain of 0.3% in June. The moderation reflected a 2.2% decline in gasoline prices. Food prices were unchanged after rising 0.3% for two straight months. Grocery store food prices fell 0.1% as a 3.9% drop in the cost of eggs more than offset a 1.5% increase in beef prices and 1.9% rise in the cost of milk.

In the 12 months through July, the CPI advanced 2.7%, matching the rise in June. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the CPI would rise 0.2% and increase 2.8% on a year-over-year basis.

Excluding volatile food and energy components, the CPI rose 0.3%, the biggest gain since January, after climbing 0.2% in June. The so-called core CPI was lifted by higher prices for services, including a 4.0% rebound in airline fares as well as strong increases in the costs of healthcare and dental services.

The cost of household furnishings and supplies rose 0.7%, while footwear prices surged 1.4%. Motor vehicle parts and equipment prices vaulted 0.9%, driven by a 1.0% increase in the cost of tires.

The core CPI increased 3.1% on a year-over-year basis in July after an advance of 2.9% in June. ...




#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-08-12 11:54 AM | Reply

"7.8% inflation is less than 9!"

MAGAT ---------

#2 | Posted by LegallyYourDead at 2025-08-12 01:24 PM | Reply

Where is ScottS to explain this all to us?

#3 | Posted by jpw at 2025-08-12 03:38 PM | Reply


This CPI report complicates the upcoming Fed decision.

Labor is starting to show some cracks in its strength. That would indicate a bias towards a rate cut.

But inflation seems to be starting to creep up. That would indicate a bias towards holding the rates steady.

Keep in mind, though, there is another tranche of financial data before the Fed's September meeting, so it looks more like a ~stay tuned~ type of thing.

I will say that from what I saw of talking heads today on finance TV, Wall Street seems to have increased their odds of a Fed rate decrease in September.

But with another batch of data before then, I'll choose not to occupy that limb with them.




#4 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-08-12 06:15 PM | Reply

caused a measure of underlying inflation to post its largest gain in six months.

POSTED BY LAMPLIGHTER

Thanks for bringing that to our attention.

Dear Leader will have those numbers corrected immediately.

I am pretty sure inflation was brought down to zero on day one! Trumpy promised!

In fact, I believe the corrected. numbers will show inflation has dropped by 1,000%. Probably 1,500%. It's now at least negative 25% to make up for Biden destroying the economy. Grocery stores and car dealers will be soon paying you to shop there.

#5 | Posted by donnerboy at 2025-08-13 10:41 PM | Reply

__________
#14 | Posted by fishpaw at 2025-08-12 03:05 PM
No tariffs and 500 billion invested in the US

That's just another "pacifier" to baby-bully, who needs constant affirmation of his "deal-making greatness"... Apple's total annual capex for 2025 TTM was ~$12.4B including spending outside the US, which will continue.

To get to $500B will take 40 years of non-inflation-adjusted dollars, or 5 years of foregoing annual profits ($99B TTM to date). Of course, with new Trump-induced lower short-term interest rates, higher inflation and policy of weaker ruble, er, US dollar, this may come much sooner.

IOW, "Art of the Con" artist Trump is ---------- us, and Apple and those who depend/relied on NORMAL economic relations with the US are just playing along and for time, until "This, too, shall pass". Trump (and MAGA cult) didn't even understand the backhanded slap in the face when Tim "Apple" Cook presented him with the "golden calf"... er, plaque.

Same with the countries and blocks he made supposed "deals" with, e.g., Japan ($550B) and Korea ($350B) - they don't know what he was bragging about: there was only specific commitments to buy $16.5B worth of US goods, the rest was vague promises of "investment" in loans and IOUs ... and there was nothing about "90% of 'profits' going to the US" ... and nothing was formalized, of course.

Some countries make "deals" only to lower "tariff rates" (taxes on Americans), others don't, but every one is waiting and hoping for lawsuits in US courts to strike tariff authority down.

And as far as "not causing inflation" - remember that companies pay tariffs to Treasury immediately and they did inventory front-running, so we didn't see increases in the consumer pipeline yet... but core CPI moved up at fastest pace in 6mos to annualized 3.1%, and the latest PPI / wholesale core and headline numbers hit 0.9% for July - far above 0.2% expected, most of which will be passed along to consumers and some possibly absorbed by the companies while they are cutting tariff costs by layoffs and automation. So we have both weakening economy and employment, and rising prices - consistent with some forecasts of what was called "stagflation" in the '70s.

And some tariffs increased on August 7, so we haven't seen the effects of that yet.

Something that Trump doesn't [want to] understand : money from tariffs is not "flowing into the US" from other countries - they are paid/transferred to Treasury from American businesses / importers - IOW, it's an internal tax on imports, which was about 13.5% of US economy in recent years. Exports, which represent about 30+% of revenue by S&P 500 companies may also shrink as consumers of other countries "buy local" and boycott American goods if there are alternatives. Las Vegas and other tourist destinations already see some of it.

In July 2025, 71 large US companies filed for bankruptcy. Year-to-date 446 bankruptcies, already surpassing full year totals for 2021, 70 of them in the industrial sector.

IOW, Trump's tariffs may reduce meaningless metric of "US trade deficits" ("Yay, success!") but they are also shrinking world trade... and economies, including the US... which you may not see clearly due to lower USD.

Oh what a tangled web we "weave"...

And CBO projection of One Big Bloody Bu**-Ugly Bill creating additional $3.5T in debt in the next 10 years? I think we can do "better" and do it in 3-4 years, despite all of the imagined DOGE "savings" and "trillions or hundreds of billions of dollars flowing in" in tariffs.

US deficit hit $291B in July - that's an annual pace of $3.5T. July tariffs brought in $25B - Trump called it "incredible revenue" - but the government spent $630B.

"It's the spending, stupid."
__________

#6 | Posted by CutiePie at 2025-08-15 06:44 AM | Reply

__________
Re #6 - sorry, wrong thread... again.
__________

#7 | Posted by CutiePie at 2025-08-15 06:52 AM | Reply

Comments are closed for this entry.

Home | Breaking News | Comments | User Blogs | Stats | Back Page | RSS Feed | RSS Spec | DMCA Compliance | Privacy

Drudge Retort