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US CPI rises 3.5% year-on-year in June 2026, below the 3.8% forecast, as energy prices pull back

The US Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on July 14 that the consumer price index rose 3.5% year-on-year in June 2026, cooling more than expected after a run-up linked to the Iran war's energy shock; falling gasoline prices drove the miss versus the 3.8% consensus, though many household costs stayed elevated.

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报道分歧

同一条新闻,各国新闻编辑室如何讲述。引文均注明出处并链接原文。

United States

CNBC

“Consumer prices rose 3.5% annually in June, less than expected as energy prices eased.”

US financial network; earliest verified report on the June 2026 CPI release, anchoring the 3.5% outcome against the 3.8% consensus forecast and attributing the miss to easing energy prices.阅读原文 ↗

United States

Fox Business

“Consumer price growth slowed after a recent surge caused by the Iran war.”

US conservative financial outlet; explicitly linked the prior CPI surge to the Iran war's energy shock, a framing distinct from CNBC's more neutral energy-price language, and confirmed the BLS data.阅读原文 ↗

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Summary

The US Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on July 14 that the country's consumer price index rose 3.5% year-on-year in June 2026, cooler than the 3.8% consensus forecast. Lower gasoline prices were the main driver of the downside surprise, pulling back from the spike that Fox Business attributed directly to the Iran war's energy shock earlier this year. Many other household costs remained elevated, CBS News noted. The reading is the first inflation data point since the latest round of US strikes on Iran and follows Q2 earnings from major US banks who flagged interest rate uncertainty as a key variable.

Why it matters

A below-forecast CPI print reduces pressure on the US Federal Reserve to hold rates higher for longer, offering some room for a rate cut if the trend continues. The Fed has pointed to persistent services inflation as its primary concern; June's energy-driven miss does not resolve that, but it prevents a fresh argument for further tightening at a time when the Hormuz levy is still working through import prices.

What to watch

  • Core CPI (ex-food, energy) details in the full BLS release for persistent services inflation
  • US Federal Reserve commentary and implied rate-path shift after the June reading
  • July CPI, which will capture the full effect of Hormuz-related energy price movements

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