US wholesale inflation rose sharply last month as Iran oil shock continues to drive up business costs

US consumers are facing the fastest price inflation they’ve seen in three years.

It likely hasn’t yet peaked.

New data Thursday showed that input costs for American businesses are still rising quite rapidly as the Iran war’s oil shock continues to ripple through the economy.

The Producer Price Index, a closely watched gauge of wholesale inflation, rose 1.1% in May, lifting the annual rate to 6.5%, its highest since November 2022, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data released Thursday.

While wholesale inflation doesn’t exactly translate to what consumers end up paying, Thursday’s PPI is sending warning signals that even more price hikes are coming down the pike.

Wholesale inflation is running at the second-fastest pace on record: The 1.1% increase in monthly inflation, which matched the rate of increase seen in April, following revisions, is the fastest since March 2022. The annual rate is the highest since November 2022.

Thursday’s data came in hotter than expected. Economists were thinking that the war-driven price spike would still pack a punch, but one with a little less bite than in April, which originally showed a 1.4% monthly price hike.

Economists were expecting PPI to rise 0.6% from April and the annual rate to reach 6.4%, FactSet estimates show.

“That pressure has to go somewhere – flowing downstream to the retailers that purchased those goods, the transportation companies that move those goods to market, and eventually the consumers,” Kurt Rankin, senior economist at the PNC Financial Services Group, told CNN. “That sustained pressure upstream means that this inflationary story has not resolved.”

Rate hike, layoff concerns on the rise

PPI, which measures the average change in prices received by US-based producers, serves as a potential bellwether for what consumers could experience in the months to come, though the higher prices businesses pay each other aren’t always fully passed through the supply chain.

Economists were expecting PPI to rise 0.6% from April and the annual rate to reach 6.4%, FactSet estimates show.

“That pressure has to go somewhere – flowing downstream to the retailers that purchased those goods, the transportation companies that move those goods to market, and eventually the consumers,” Kurt Rankin, senior economist at the PNC Financial Services Group, told CNN. “That sustained pressure upstream means that this inflationary story has not resolved.”

Rate hike, layoff concerns on the rise

PPI, which measures the average change in prices received by US-based producers, serves as a potential bellwether for what consumers could experience in the months to come, though the higher prices businesses pay each other aren’t always fully passed through the supply chain.

PPI also is closely watched because several of its categories feed in to the Personal Consumption Expenditures price index, the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge.

The Fed — with its new leader, Chair Kevin Warsh — is expected to keep its benchmark interest rate steady at next week’s policymaking meeting; however, the acceleration in inflation and a trio of stronger-than-expected jobs reports have the chatter growing for an eventual rate hike.

“The talk of higher rates is certainly warranted, but whether that comes to fruition, though, depends on how these price pressures flow through,” Rankin said, noting PNC does not have any rate hikes in its forecast. “We saw after the tariff situation and in the early months of this conflict that producers are aware that consumers are not just blindly accepting higher prices.”

That dynamic could spell another concern, though.

Wholesale inflation can eventually impact consumers’ wallets; however, it happens on an indirect and uncertain path, noted Elizabeth Renter, senior economist at NerdWallet.

“The latest figures portend some inflationary pressures will continue to weigh on households in the months ahead,” she wrote in a note Thursday.

Excluding food and energy prices, a core measurement of PPI rose 0.4% from April, holding at 4.9% annually.

When also stripping out the price changes for “trade services” – a volatile category that measures profit margins for wholesalers and retailers – in addition to energy and food, that index rose 0.8% in May (a four-year high) and 5.1% annually, the largest rise since October 2022.

Panorama Hispano is the regional news and information newspaper for Hispanic and other diverse communities.

US Hispanics are now the largest ethnic minority in the United States numbering 54.2 million as of July 2014. Serving: Buffalo, Rochester, Fredonia, Niagara Falls, NY and Erie, PA. Outside our Market area: Visit our affiliate at: http://www.impremedia.com/

Contact us: Contact@PanoramaHispanoNews.com

Featured News

Jun 29, 2026
The first Round of 32 in World Cup history is here. There’s a real debate over whether it will be good for the tournament

Welcome to the first full week of World Cup knockout matches, where dreams will be made and hearts broken all […]

Read More
Jun 29, 2026
US wholesale inflation rose sharply last month as Iran oil shock continues to drive up business costs

US consumers are facing the fastest price inflation they’ve seen in three years. It likely hasn’t yet peaked. New data […]

Read More
Jun 29, 2026
US Supreme Court rebuffs Trump’s appeal in E. Jean Carroll case

By Andrew Chung WASHINGTON, June 29 (Reuters) – The U.S. Supreme Court declined on Monday to hear President Donald Trump’s […]

Read More

popular categories

Featured (5,530)
Mundo Latino (2,123)
Locales / Regional (1,277)
Buffalo (2,153)
Dunkirk (1,702)
Rochester (1,668)
PA (1,256)
Negocios / Tecnología (1,093)
Tecnología y Science (220)
Salud (571)
Deportes (964)
Entretenimiento (816)
Extras (456)
Movies (232)
Viajes, Vida y Estilo (729)
Copyright © 2026 Panorama Hispano News. All Rights Reserved.
crossmenuchevron-downmenu-circlecross-circle
linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram