The economic calendar was highlighted by the Consumer Price Index and the Producer Price Index. Both readings came in hotter than expected. Headline CPI increased by 0.4% versus the street expectation of a 0.3% increase. On a year-over-year basis, the CPI increased by 3.2% in February versus a 3.1% gain in January. The Core CPI, which excludes food and energy, rose by 0.4% versus an estimated 0.3% increase and was up 3.8% year-over-year, down from 3.9% in January. Shelter costs continued to be sticky, gaining 0.4% in February. Headline PPI came in at 0.6%, much higher than the anticipated 0.3% increase. The year-over-year figure increased by 1.6% from January’s 0.9%. The Core number was up 0.3%, slightly above the 0.2% consensus estimate, and came in at 2% year-over-year, unchanged from January. Increased energy costs had a prominent influence on the headline number. Goods inflation ticked higher at the producer level. Retail sales got a nice bounce from January, rising 0.6%. The Ex-Autos Retail sales figure came in at 0.3%. The labor market continues to be tight as Initial Jobless claims fell by 1k to 209k. Continuing Claims rose by 17k to 1.811m. A preliminary look at the University of Michigan’s Consumer Sentiment index showed a decline of sentiment to 76.5 from 77.3 in February.
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