The surface-level inflation data is masking a much more complex reality underneath the hood.
U.S. import prices ticked up again in January, driven by a powerful surge in capital goods that completely overpowered a significant drop in global energy costs. As the market eagerly awaits the delayed PCE inflation report, this import data suggests the disinflationary path is getting bumpy.
📊 THE DATA METRICS:
- The Headline Move: Import prices rose 0.2% in January, matching December’s upwardly revised gain. On a 12-month basis, the headline index is relatively flat, dipping just 0.1%.
- The Energy Drag: Imported fuel prices tumbled 2.2% (following a 1.1% decline in December), artificially weighing down the headline number.
- The Core Surge: When you strip out volatile fuel and food, core import prices shot up 0.5% in January. Over the past year, core import prices have advanced a notable 1.6%.
- The Capital Goods Engine: This core stickiness was heavily driven by a 0.4% jump in imported capital goods, specifically powered by a 0.5% spike in non-electrical machinery.
- The Currency Factor: This imported inflation is directly tied to foreign exchange dynamics. The trade-weighted U.S. dollar declined 7.37% in 2025 and is already down roughly 1.61% so far this year, effectively importing higher costs from major trade partners.
⚖️ THE PCE IMPLICATION: Why does this matter right now? Because specific import data (like air passenger fares, which plunged 10.1% in this report) feeds directly into the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge: the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index. Despite the drop in airfares, the broader surge in core goods and recent producer price acceleration has economists estimating that January’s core PCE could rise by as much as 0.5% month-over-month, translating to a sticky 3.1% year-over-year increase.
💡 ANALYST TAKEAWAY: We are witnessing a macroeconomic tug-of-war between deflationary global energy markets and inflationary capital goods. The fact that core import prices are accelerating at a 0.5% monthly clip suggests that the weaker U.S. dollar is starting to successfully import inflation directly onto American balance sheets. If January’s delayed core PCE report hits that 3.1% year-over-year estimate next Friday, the Federal Reserve’s narrative of a smooth disinflationary glide path to 2% will face severe scrutiny from the bond market.
👇 Macro Strategists & Fixed Income Investors: Is the recent weakness in the US Dollar the primary catalyst for this core import price surge, or are global supply chains fundamentally repricing capital goods higher regardless of currency effects?
