Inflation rose to 5-month high in December. What that means for Fed rate cuts.

Inflation accelerated for a third straight month in December on rising food and energy costs, reaching a five-month high and underscoring that an encouraging slowdown in price increases last spring and summer has stalled.

But an underlying measure of price gains eased in a sign that inflation could resume its descent through the first half of 2025, though economists say President-elect Donald Trump’s trade and immigration policies could nudge costs higher later in the year.

Overall consumer prices increased 2.9% from a year earlier, up from 2.7% in November, according to the Labor Department’s consumer price index, a broad measure of goods and services costs. That’s the third increase following six drops and it leaves annual inflation at the highest level since July.  Economists surveyed by Bloomberg expected a jump to 2.9%

On a monthly basis, costs rose 0.4% the most since March.

A customer holds a can of cream of celery Campbell's Soup at a grocery store in Phoenix, Arizona. Inflation has remained stubbornly high in recent months.
A customer holds a can of cream of celery Campbell's Soup at a grocery store in Phoenix, Arizona. Inflation has remained stubbornly high in recent months.

What is meant by core inflation?

Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy items and is watched more closely by the Federal Reserve because it reflects more sustainable trends, increased a modest 0.2% following four months of 0.3% bumps. That lowered the annual increase to 3.2% from 3.3% the previous three months.

Is inflation expected to go down?

After falling steadily earlier in 2024, yearly inflation has moved sideways the past several months. The price of services such as health care and car repairs generally has risen as a result of higher labor costs and auto prices – legacies of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Meanwhile, goods prices had been tumbling as pandemic-related supply chain bottlenecks unwound but recently have flatlined or edged up now that those benefits have run their course.

Goldman Sachs expects wage growth and rent hikes to slow, pushing inflation lower in the coming months. By April, Barclays predicts overall price increases will drop to 2.3% while core inflation slides to 2.7%. That would be well below the 40-year high of 9.1% in mid-2022 and modestly above the Federal Reserve’s 2% goal.

But by the end of the year, both Barclays and Goldman believe the tariffs Trump has threatened to impose on certain imports, especially from China, will drive prices higher. Trump’s plan to deport millions of immigrants who lack permanent legal status also could boost labor costs that are typically passed to consumers through price increases, the firms said.

Barclays expects inflation to climb back to 2.8% by next December while the core reading drifts up to 3.1%.

How many rate cuts are expected in 2025?

December’s elevated inflation reading likely bolsters the Fed’s case to pause its rate cuts in January and slow the pace of decreases this year.