Skip to main content
logo
  • Investment Strategies
    Overview

    Investment Options

    • Alternatives
    • Beta Strategies
    • Equities
    • Fixed Income
    • Multi-Asset Solutions

    Capabilities & Solutions

    • Pension Strategy & Analytics
    • Global Insurance Solutions
    • Outsourced CIO
    • Sustainable investing
  • Insights
    Overview

    Market Insights

    • Market Insights Overview
    • Eye on the Market
    • Guide to the Markets
    • Guide to Alternatives
    • Market Updates
    • The Canada Economic and Market Update

    Portfolio Insights

    • Portfolio Insights Overview
    • Alternatives
    • Asset Class Views
    • Currency
    • Equity
    • Fixed Income
    • Long-Term Capital Market Assumptions
    • Strategic Investment Advisory Group
    • Multi-Asset Solutions Strategy Report
  • Resources
    Overview
    • Center for Investment Excellence Podcasts
    • Events & Webcasts
    • Insights App
    • Library
    • NEW: Morgan Institutional
  • About Us
    Overview
    • Diversity, Opportunity & Inclusion
    • Spectrum: Our Investment Platform
    • Our Leadership Team
  • Contact Us
  • English
  • Role
  • Country
Morgan Institutional
Search
Menu
Search
You are about to leave the site Close
J.P. Morgan Asset Management’s website and/or mobile terms, privacy and security policies don't apply to the site or app you're about to visit. Please review its terms, privacy and security policies to see how they apply to you. J.P. Morgan Asset Management isn’t responsible for (and doesn't provide) any products, services or content at this third-party site or app, except for products and services that explicitly carry the J.P. Morgan Asset Management name.
CONTINUE Go Back

While the Fed will likely succumb to cutting pressure in September, investors should realize that the trajectory for interest rates may not be as aggressively dovish as recent data suggest.

July CPI inflation defied consensus in two different directions: headline surprised to the downside, while core surprised higher. This relative softness in the headline print is important: the Fed, targeting headline inflation as part of its “dual mandate”, can add this soft surprise to the recent slowdown in payroll gains and paint a compelling picture for a rate cut in September.

The details of the report, however, show a muddier picture, one where tariff-related price pressure is building, and services costs are firming more than expected.

  • Softer headline but stronger core on falling energy prices: Headline CPI rose 0.2% on the month (2.7% on the year), flat with June’s reading. Food prices were flat, but energy prices fell over 1%, driven by a sharp decline in gasoline prices. Without these commodities, core prices rose 3.1% on the year – the hottest print since February.
  • Core goods price changes were lumpy: Core goods prices rose at a pace that matched last month (0.2%), but recently-cool spots warmed while recently-warm spots cooled. New vehicle prices were flat as dealers continued to offload inventory but used vehicle prices rose for the first time since February; and appliance prices fell after spiking last month.
  • Core services prices surprisingly firm: Core services inflation accelerated on the month relative to June. Shelter inflation – long a thorn in the side of the CPI calculation – persisted at previous levels, and airfare prices saw a meaningful 4% gain after five consecutive months of declines.

Warmth in certain core goods components is easy to explain away: tariffs are taking their toll on import prices. Softness in other core goods components is similarly easy to explain: inventory build in the first quarter allowed certain businesses to front-run tariffs, and others might be absorbing tariffs through margin compression, suggesting that prices will eventually rise once these forces fade.

Much more puzzling is the core services dynamic. Undoubtedly a seasonal component has encouraged part of it – end-of-summer whatever-the-cost travel demands have helped to reinvigorate airline pricing power (TSA checkpoints saw almost 5% more travelers relative to the prior month). However, they don’t explain everything: recreation prices were up; and services as disparate as haircuts to laundry to dentist visits saw upward price pressure, too.

This strength in services could perhaps just be the “calm before the storm” – consumers spending while tariff-related inflation is subdued; but it might also reflect underlying tailwinds – like record high equity prices, fading policy uncertainty and recently-passed fiscal stimulus.

The net result, as with many recent data prints, is there is more to the inflationary story than meets the eye. While the Fed will likely succumb to cutting pressure in September, investors should realize that the trajectory for interest rates may not be as aggressively dovish as recent data suggest.     

db0ac6d3-783d-11f0-b41b-c34272d05b7b
  • Macroeconomic
  • Federal Reserve
  • Inflation
  • Tariffs
J.P. Morgan Asset Management

  • About us
  • Investment stewardship
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookie policy
  • Sitemap
  • Conflicts of interest disclosure
  • Quebec Complaints Handling Process Summary
J.P. Morgan

  • J.P. Morgan
  • JPMorgan Chase
  • Chase

READ IMPORTANT LEGAL INFORMATION. CLICK HERE >

The value of investments may go down as well as up and investors may not get back the full amount invested.

Copyright 2025 JPMorgan Chase & Co. All rights reserved.