How to Read CPI in 5 Minutes — The Inflation Number That Moves Markets
Core idea
You can understand any inflation report by asking three simple questions: where was the surprise, what caused it, and what does it mean for interest rates.
Your 3-Question Framework for Inflation Day
Was the surprise in headline or core? This first question tells you if the price shock is widespread or isolated. A surprise in core is much more significant because it signals a stickier inflation problem.
What categories drove the move? You need to look under the hood. The single biggest component is 'shelter,' which makes up over a third of the index and is based on rents, not home prices. If shelter and services are rising, it's a sign that inflation is becoming embedded in the economy.
How will this change bets on the Fed? This is the final and most important question. Every piece of data is viewed through the lens of what it might force the Federal Reserve to do with interest rates. A hot core report driven by services makes investors bet that the Fed will keep rates higher for longer to cool things down.
What to watch
- ✓Core CPI (Month-over-Month): Forget the year-over-year number. The monthly change shows you the current momentum of underlying inflation right now.
- ✓Shelter Component: This is the 800-pound gorilla of CPI, making up over a third of the index. If shelter is accelerating, it's very hard for overall inflation to cool down.
- ✓Services ex-Housing ('Supercore'): This is a favorite indicator of the Fed. It reflects wage pressures and the stickiest part of inflation, so a rise here gets their immediate attention.
- ✓10-Year Treasury Yield: Watch how this bond yield moves in the first 15 minutes after the report is released. It is the market's instant verdict on what the CPI data means for the future of interest rates.
Deep dive
Every month, a single number called the Consumer Price Index, or CPI, can send markets soaring or tumbling. Most people only see that one headline figure. But the real story is often hidden inside.
Analysts immediately split the report into two parts: 'headline' and 'core'. Headline inflation is the price change of everything, including volatile items like gasoline and food. Core inflation removes those, giving you a clearer view of the underlying trend. Think of it like checking your car's engine health. You don't just look at how fast it's going right now; you listen for steady, consistent performance. Core inflation is the market's way of listening to the economy's engine.
This matters because central banks, like the U.S. Federal Reserve, base their interest rate decisions on whether inflation is broad and persistent. A surprise in core inflation tells them the problem might be deeper than just a temporary spike in gas prices, which directly impacts the cost of your mortgage, car loan, and credit card debt.
The 3-question framework was on full display in early 2024. In the first few months of the year, several CPI reports came in 'hotter' than expected. Following the steps, analysts quickly saw the problem wasn't just a headline issue.
The surprise was in the core number. Digging into the categories, the main culprit was stubbornly high 'shelter' inflation. Even as the price of goods fell, the cost of rent and equivalent services kept climbing. This led directly to the third question. Because shelter is such a large and slow-moving part of the economy, the market concluded the Fed couldn't possibly cut interest rates soon. As a result, government bond yields shot up, and expectations for rate cuts were pushed months into the future.
If core CPI comes in hotter than expected, driven by shelter and services... then you should expect bond prices to fall (pushing their yields higher) and the U.S. dollar to strengthen, as investors bet on higher rates for longer.
If core CPI comes in cooler than expected... then you might see the opposite. Bond prices could rise (yields fall) and the dollar could weaken as the market prices in earlier interest rate cuts.
If headline CPI is hot but core is cool... then the market will likely 'look through' the noise. This is why understanding the components is your edge; you'll know why the market is shrugging off a scary-looking headline.
Further reading
This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always do your own research before making investment decisions.