Inflation slowed faster than expected in October. Does that mean rate hikes are over?

After rising and then moving sideways in recent months, inflation emphatically resumed its descent in October.

Consumer price increases eased more than expected as falling gasoline and used car prices offset another rise in rent and a rebound in health insurance costs.

An underlying measure of price increases that the Federal Reserve watches more closely stayed elevated but also pulled back, bolstering the case for the Fed to continue to hold rates steady after a flurry of aggressive hikes.

Consumer prices overall rose 3.2% from a year earlier, down from 3.7% in September, according to the Labor Department’s consumer price index. That pulled inflation closer to the more than two-year low it reached in June and July, before a surge in gasoline prices. On a monthly basis, prices were unchanged following a 0.4% rise the previous month.

The developments at least raise the prospect of some longer-lasting relief for Americans who have struggled to keep pace with rapidly rising prices triggered by pandemic-related supply chain troubles and consumer demand surges for more than two years.

"October’s report had good news for both winning the long-term inflation fight and easing some short-term pain," says corporate economist Robert Frick of Navy Federal Credit Union.

What is core inflation right now?

Core prices, which strip out volatile food and energy items and which the Fed follows more closely, rose 0.2% after 0.3% bumps the previous two months. The advance pushed the annual increase to 4% from 4.1% in September, the lowest since September 2021.

How is the S&P 500 stock index reacting to inflation?

Investors welcomed the encouraging report. The Dow Jones industrial averaged soared 465 points, or 1.4%, in midday trading to 34,798. And the S&P 500 index rose 1.7% to 4,488.

How is the 10-year Treasury yield responding to the news?

The yield on the 10-year Treasury tumbled to 4.46% from 4.64% late Monday. That’s a significant move for the bond market. Just a few weeks ago, the 10-year yield was above 5% and at its highest level since 2007. Bond yields and prices move in opposite directions.

How long will it take for inflation to go back to normal?

Since reaching a 40-year high of 9.1% in June 2022, inflation has come down substantially but remained stubbornly high in recent months.Prices for goods such as used cars and furniture have dropped as pandemic-related supply-chain snarls have unwound. But the cost of services such as rent, car repairs and auto insurance, have continued to edge higher in part because of swiftly rising employee wages tied to labor shortages. Last month, however, inflation slowed more dramatically.