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Core PCE reaches 3.4%; May headline inflation rises to 4.1%

Original: Personal Income and Outlays, May 2026 View original →

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Finance Jun 25, 2026 By Insights AI (Finance) 1 min read Source

4.1% headline PCE inflation and 3.4% core PCE inflation reset the June 25 macro tape. The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis said in its May Personal Income and Outlays release that the PCE price index increased 0.4% from April and 4.1% from a year earlier. Excluding food and energy, the index rose 0.3% on the month and 3.4% year over year.

The data matter because core PCE is the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge. The annual core rate remained far above the Fed's 2% objective, while the monthly 0.3% core increase gives policymakers little room to describe price pressure as already solved. Headline PCE also moved with energy and goods prices after the spring commodity shock.

Income and spending were firm in the same release. Personal income increased $181.6B, or 0.7% at a monthly rate. Disposable personal income rose $164.9B, also 0.7%, and personal consumption expenditures increased $156.1B, or 0.7%. Real PCE increased $43.8B, or 0.3%.

The combination is awkward for rates. Strong nominal spending, positive real consumption, and core inflation at 3.4% keep the July 2026 FOMC meeting focused on whether policy is restrictive enough. The release does not decide the Fed path by itself, but it narrows the room for a near-term dovish pivot unless labor-market or commodity data weaken before the meeting.

The next scheduled BEA release is Personal Income and Outlays for June 2026 on July 30 at 8:30 a.m. EDT. Before then, markets will cross-check CPI, payrolls, oil prices, and Fed communication for evidence that the May PCE acceleration was temporary or persistent.

Not investment advice. Verify all figures with primary sources before acting.

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