Inflation expected to remain above Fed target in November as economic data schedule gets back on track [View all]
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Inflation expected to remain above Fed target in November as economic data schedule gets back on track
Jake Conley Breaking Business News Reporter
Wed, December 17, 2025 at 3:03 PM EST 2 min read
Inflation data set for release Thursday morning is expected to show price increases remain above the Federal Reserve's target in the final major piece of US economic data released on an altered schedule due to the government shutdown.
The November Consumer Price Index (CPI) report is set for release at 8:30 a.m. ET on Thursday and is expected to show headline prices rose 3.1% over the prior year, according to data from Bloomberg. ... "Core CPI," which strips out the often-volatile food and energy categories, is expected to rise 3.1% from last year. ... In September, the last month for which there is inflation data, both the headline and core CPI measures rose 3% from a year ago.
Thursday's report will mark the first official inflation read since September, after the BLS opted to cancel the October report in light of the US government shutdown. This means November's reading will not have month-on-month comparisons for the headline and core CPI figures.
This should also mark the final time major economic data, notably the monthly jobs report and inflation data, is published on an altered schedule following the government shutdown that lasted 43 days earlier this year. ... The November jobs report was released on Tuesday, showing more jobs were created last month than expected, while the unemployment rate hit a four-year high. The December jobs report is set for release on Jan. 9, 2026, returning to its typical spot on a Friday morning.
"Inflation is still above target ... but this should be temporary," said Jeffrey Roach, chief economist for LPL Financial. "As demand cools in the coming months, pricing pressures should ease, giving investors some breathing room." ... Economists at Bank of America wrote in a report ahead of the release that goods inflation should "remain sticky owing to tariffs," while services "should be softer driven in part by health insurance."
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Jake Conley is a breaking news reporter covering US equities for Yahoo Finance. Follow him on X at @byjakeconley or email him at jake.conley@yahooinc.com.