CPI, PPI & PCE — Which Inflation Data Actually Moves Price.
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What is covered in this chapter
The Inflation Data Hierarchy
Central banks are data-dependent, which means economic releases dictate policy changes. Inflation data is the highest-impact indicator on the economic calendar. However, not all inflation metrics are treated equally by institutional desks. To build an effective macro directional bias, you must understand the difference between CPI, PPI, and PCE.
The Primary Metrics
- CPI (Consumer Price Index): Measures the average change over time in the prices paid by urban consumers for a market basket of consumer goods and services. It is the headline metric that media outlets report and retail traders watch.
- PPI (Producer Price Index): Measures the average change over time in the selling prices received by domestic producers for their output. PPI is a leading indicator for CPI, as rising producer costs are eventually passed on to consumers.
- PCE (Personal Consumption Expenditures): The Federal Reserve's preferred measure of inflation. It tracks actual consumer behavior more accurately than CPI by accounting for substitution (e.g., consumers buying chicken when beef prices rise).
A professional trader looks beyond the headline figures. We focus on Core Inflation (which strips out volatile food and energy prices) to identify the structural inflation trends that central banks actually trade.
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