U.S. September CPI Results (Released October 24, 2025)
📊 Headline Data
-
CPI (MoM): +0.3%(forecast +0.3%, previous +0.4%)
-
CPI (YoY): +3.0%(previous +2.9%)
-
Core CPI (MoM, ex-food & energy): +0.2%(previous +0.3%)
-
Core CPI (YoY): +3.0%(previous +3.0%)
Inflation in September came in exactly as expected, confirming a gradual cooling trend from summer levels.
While the headline figure rose slightly year-on-year, the core index slowed, suggesting that underlying inflationary pressure continues to ease.
🛢️ Sector Breakdown
| Category | Monthly Change | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Energy | +1.5% | Gasoline +4.1% drove the overall rise |
| Food | +0.2% | Modest gain, led by in-home meals (+0.3%) |
| Core Components | +0.2% | Shelter, airfare, leisure, home goods, and apparel up |
| Decliners | — | Auto insurance, used cars/trucks, and communications down |
On a year-over-year basis:
-
Headline CPI: +3.0%
-
Core CPI: +3.0%
-
Energy: +2.8%
-
Food: +3.1%
All components remain clustered around the 3% level, consistent with a disinflationary but still sticky inflation environment.
💹 Market Reaction
The cooler inflation tone prompted renewed rate-cut expectations:
-
U.S. Treasury yields edged lower.
-
The U.S. dollar weakened broadly, especially against the euro, yen, and commodity currencies.
-
Risk assets such as equities and gold firmed slightly as investors priced in a softer policy stance from the Federal Reserve going into the next FOMC meeting.
In short, the September CPI confirmed a controlled inflation slowdown, reigniting expectations for a gradual rate-cut cycle and temporarily shifting sentiment toward dollar weakness.


