Inflation eases in US as prices for used cars fall
Inflation in the US cooled last month, as prices for energy and used cars dropped.
The consumer price index rose by 2.4 per cent over the 12 months to January, the Labour Department said. That was down from 2.7 per cent in the prior month and marked the slowest pace since May.
The retreat could add fuel to arguments by US President Donald Trump and others that the central bank is in a position to cut interest rates without stoking a new flare-up in prices.
But some analysts have warned that further progress toward the Federal Reserve’s 2 per cent target could stall in the months ahead, if companies start to pass on the costs of tariffs more fully to consumers or labour shortages push up prices for services.

For now, analysts said there were limited signs of any impact from tariffs, as prices for commodities, stripping out food and energy, held steady last month.
Neil Birrell, chief investment officer at Premier Miton Investors, said the effects of tariffs remained uncertain, and noted other data quirks that could be affecting January’s figures.
But he said the January report was likely to “ease the path towards a cut in rates sooner rather than later”.
“The US economy looks to be in fine fettle with growth strong, inflation stable, the job market looking firmer and a Fed that has room to manoeuvre,” he added.

The White House, which has been facing political pressure over Trump’s handling of the economy, was quick to celebrate the report, the latest to deliver good news on the state of the US economy.
Job growth last month was also stronger than expected, the Labour Department reported earlier this week.
“President Trump has defeated Joe Biden’s inflation crisis,” the White House said in a statement, adding that the economy would “turbocharge even further” if the Fed made “long-overdue” interest rate cuts.
Markets, which had a muted reaction to the inflation report, currently expect the Fed to cut rates in June.
Atakan Bakiskan, a US economist at Berenberg, said recent job and inflation data meant “the year could not have started on a better footing for Fed officials.”
But he cautioned that the bank was not fully in the clear.
“We lean toward the view that, sooner rather than later, labour shortages will exert enough upward pressure on wage growth such that services inflation will not come down enough for inflation to return to the Fed’s 2 per cent target – a goal the Fed has now missed for 59 months – but hey, who’s counting?”
Prices for personal services, such as dry cleaning and haircuts, rose 1.6 per cent from December to January, and are up nearly 7 per cent from a year ago.














