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March Wholesale Prices Rose Just 0.5% Less Than Half of What Wall Street Expected

Published Apr 14, 2026
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Summary:
  • The Producer Price Index rose 0.5% in March, well below the 1.1% forecast, in the biggest downside surprise in months.
  • Core PPI, which strips out food and energy, barely moved at just 0.1% versus a 0.5% estimate.
  • Energy prices surged 8.5% in March due to the Iran conflict, but that was offset by stable costs in other areas.

Everyone feared the Iran war would send prices through the roof. The March data says otherwise. The Producer Price Index rose just 0.5% in March. Wall Street had called for 1.1%. The miss was huge. Core PPI - which strips out food and energy to show the trend beneath - barely moved at 0.1%. The call was 0.5%. What the PPI is: It tracks what firms pay for goods before those goods reach you, the buyer. Think of it as an early warning sign for where store prices are headed. When firms pay less, they're less likely to raise prices on what you buy.

Energy Spiked, but Everything Else Held

Here's the key detail. Energy costs did jump 8.5% in March. That's a direct hit from the Iran war and the oil spike. But almost every other part of the economy held steady. The cost of services barely moved. The cost of goods outside of energy stayed flat. That means the war is hitting energy hard, but it hasn't spread to the rest of the economy yet. Year over year: Prices are up 4.0% from a year ago. Analysts had called for 4.7%. That's still above where the Fed wants things. But the trend is moving in the right direction. In plain terms: Oil got more costly. But the cost of hiring a plumber, buying clothes, or eating at a restaurant didn't change much. That's the kind of split the Fed can work with.

What This Means for Rate Cuts

This report changes the math on interest rates. Before March PPI, a lot of people on Wall Street thought the Fed might not cut at all in 2026. The fear was that war-driven price spikes would keep the Fed on hold. Now the picture looks different. If the consumer price data - due out later this week - also comes in cool, the case for a summer rate cut gets much stronger. For home buyers: Rate cuts from the Fed would push mortgage rates down over time. That would make it cheaper to buy a home. The March PPI is one step in that direction.

For stock investors: Lower rates help growth stocks the most. Tech, biotech, and other firms that need cheap cash to grow tend to rally when rate cuts get closer.

What to Watch

The March consumer price data drops later this week. If it shows the same cool trend as PPI, expect the market to move higher on hopes that rate cuts are on the way. The PPI is a good sign. But the consumer report is the one the Fed watches most.

A Quick Guide to What PPI Tells You

PPI tracks what firms pay for goods. CPI tracks what you pay at the store. PPI is the first domino. When it falls, CPI tends to follow a few weeks later. That's why markets reacted so fast to this report. It hints at what's coming next. If both PPI and CPI come in soft, the case for a rate cut by summer gets very strong. And rate cuts help stocks, bonds, and the housing market all at once.

The War and Prices: A Split Story

Here's the odd thing about this data. The war pushed energy prices up hard. But the rest of the economy held firm. That split tells you that the damage from the war is real, but it hasn't spread yet. If a peace deal gets done and oil drops, the energy spike goes away. And the rest of the data is already cool. That would be the best case for rate cuts - and for stocks.

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