Inflação dos EUA dispara: CPI registra maior alta anual desde 2023 com salto de 3.0%

Os preços consomem o poder de compra americano
O Índice de Preços ao Consumidor acelera seu ritmo destrutivo - marcando a inflação mais agressiva em quase dois anos. Economistas observam os dados com preocupação crescente enquanto o Federal Reserve avalia suas opções.
O impacto direto no bolso
Essa escalada de 3.0% no último ano significa menos dinheiro no final do mês para famílias e empresas. Setores essenciais como alimentação, energia e moradia lideram o avanço, pressionando orçamentos já apertados.
Mercados em alerta máximo
Os traders ajustam suas posições diante do cenário inflacionário renovado. Ativos tradicionais enfrentam ventos contrários enquanto investidores buscam proteção contra a erosão monetária - porque, convenhamos, os bancos centrais sempre parecem surpresos quando a impressão descontrolada de dinheiro gera... inflação.
O dólar enfraquecido encontra resistência em meio à tempestade perfeita de gastos governamentais e cadeias de suprimentos ainda conturbadas. Uma lição que o mercado aprende repetidamente: a inflação nunca realmente desaparece, apenas tira uma soneca.
Energy costs rise as gasoline spikes again
Over the full 12 months through September, energy prices are now up 2.8%. But that hides some chaos under the hood.
Electricity prices jumped 5.1%, and natural gas soared 11.7%. Gasoline? Despite the September bump, it’s actually down 0.5% from this time last year.
Breaking down the food data, four out of six grocery categories climbed in September. Cereals and bakery products jumped 0.7%, matching the nonalcoholic beverages index, which also rose 0.7%.
The meats, poultry, fish, and eggs category added 0.3%, coming after a 1.0% jump in August. But not everything went up: dairy products dropped 0.5%, including a 0.7% slide in cheese, and fruits and vegetables stayed flat.
Year-over-year, the food index is now up 3.1%. Within that, food at home rose 2.7%, and food away from home rose 3.7%. Specific standouts: nonalcoholic beverages are up 5.3%, meat, poultry, fish, and eggs jumped 5.2%, and cereals and bakery goods added 1.6%.
Even fruits and vegetables climbed 1.3%, and dairy squeaked out a 0.7% gain. Dining out is more expensive too, limited service meals rose 3.2%, while full service meals gained 4.2%.
Shelter, airfare, medical care keep monthly CPI elevated
Stripping out food and energy, the core CPI rose 0.2% in September. That follows 0.3% increases in both July and August. Over the past year, this core measure is up 3.0%.
Among the gainers: shelter, airline fares, recreation, household items, and apparel. But motor vehicle insurance, used cars, and communication all dropped.
Rent and owners’ equivalent rent both rose just 0.2% and 0.1%, respectively. That’s the smallest monthly rent jump since January 2021. Lodging away from home added 1.3%. Airfares continued their rebound, climbing 2.7% on top of August’s 5.9% spike.
Recreation and furnishings rose 0.4% each. Apparel was up 0.7%, and personal care added 0.4%. New vehicles rose 0.2%, but used cars fell 0.4%.
On the healthcare front, medical care inched up 0.2%, reversing last month’s 0.2% dip. Hospital services and prescription drugs both increased 0.3%, but dental care fell 0.6%, and physicians’ services slipped 0.1%.
Year-over-year, the shelter index is up 3.6%, medical care climbed 3.3%, household operations rose 4.1%, and used cars and trucks are up 5.1% despite monthly declines.
Looking at alternative indexes, the CPI-W, which tracks wage earners and clerical workers, rose 2.9% over the past year and 0.3% month-over-month.
The C-CPI-U, a chained version of the CPI that adjusts for consumer behavior, also increased 2.9% year-over-year and 0.3% on a monthly basis. The BLS noted that these indexes may still be revised over the next few months.
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