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U.S. CPI, Rail and Nursing Strikes, Peloton Turmoil - What's Moving Markets

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By Geoffrey Smith

Investing.com -- The U.S. releases consumer inflation data for August, a key input for the Federal Reserve's meeting next week. A rail strike looms larger, while over 15,000 nurses are on strike in Minnesota looking for a 27% pay raise. Oracle's strong earnings keep stocks in buoyant mood in premarket and Barry McCarthy is cleaning house at Peloton. Russia gets a new headache to worry about, while OPEC will publish its latest forecasts for global oil demand in its monthly report. Here's what you need to know in financial markets on Tuesday, September 13.

1. Inflation nation

The big event of the week is upon us. The U.S. will report consumer inflation figures for August at 08:30 ET (12:30 GMT), with all that means for the Federal Reserve’s policy meeting next week.

Analysts expect prices to have fallen on the month – by a meager 0.1% - for the first time since May 2020, owing to the long and steady decline in gasoline prices from their summer peak. They’ve continued their decline since the end of the month and have now fallen for 13 straight weeks.

That should take the annual headline rate down for a second straight month to 8.1%, still painfully high but a full point below its June peak.

However, the sting in the tail will be in the core CPI numbers, which strip out gasoline prices and which will show how broadly inflation pressures have spread through the rest of the economy. Core CPI is expected to have risen 0.3% on the month, no slowdown from July, while the annual headline rate is expected to rise to 6.1%.

2. Playing chicken on the railroad - and in the hospital

Anyone looking for real-world evidence of inflation pressures can find them just as easily in the current state of labor relations.

A national railroad strike still looms as unions and employers continue to indulge in brinkmanship ahead of a Friday deadline, when the mandatory ‘cooling off’ period after the last round of talks expires.

Two of the biggest unions, BLET and SMART TD, are still holding out for an improved offer, while Amtrak has said it will start to limit services from Tuesday, and freight companies have said they will refuse some hazardous cargoes from Friday, unable to guarantee the minimum staffing levels required for safety.

Elsewhere, some 15,000 nurses in Minnesota began a three-day strike on Monday seeking a 27% pay raise spread over three years. It’s believed to be the biggest strike by private-sector healthcare workers in U.S. history.

3. Stocks rise as Oracle beats, Peloton cleans house

U.S. stock markets are extending gains ahead of the big inflation report later, with the market having rallied ahead of the data on confidence that the worst of the surge in prices is over.