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Visual brief World 3 sources

U.S. Energy Price Drop Pulled CPI Inflation to 3.5%

In June, lower U.S. energy prices cut CPI by 0.4%, briefly easing household fuel costs

Cross-checked across 3 sources
Briefing view

Visual briefing

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Three things to know

What happened
In June, lower U.S. energy prices cut CPI by 0.4%, briefly easing household fuel costs.
Why it matters
Gas averaged $3.85 a gallon, down from $4.07 a month earlier, a direct household-facing part of the decline.
What to watch
The relief may prove temporary: fighting hit commercial tankers, and average gasoline prices rose from $3.79 last week.

Sources & verification

Reporting behind this brief, checked before publication.

Brief text

The Consumer Price Index fell to a 3.5 percent annual increase in June, and prices marked their biggest drop from a month earlier since 2020.

  1. Frame 1In June, lower U.S. energy prices cut CPI by 0.4%, briefly easing household fuel costs.
  2. Frame 2Energy prices fell 5.7%; oil dropped 9.7% and gasoline 9.5%, pulling down the headline index.
  3. Frame 3That brought annual CPI inflation to 3.5%, below economists' 3.8% forecast and May's 4.2% reading.
  4. Frame 4Core inflation, excluding food and energy, was flat for the month and 2.6% higher than a year earlier.
  5. Frame 5Gas averaged $3.85 a gallon, down from $4.07 a month earlier, a direct household-facing part of the decline.
  6. Frame 6The relief may prove temporary: fighting hit commercial tankers, and average gasoline prices rose from $3.79 last week.
How this was checked
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Published
Jul 14, 2:08 PM EDT
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