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Higher Capital Goods Prices lift US imported inflation in Jan

WASHINGTON, March 5 (Reuters) - U.S. import prices increased in January as a decline in the cost of energy products was more than offset by a surge in capital goods prices, government data ​showed on Thursday.

Import prices rose 0.2% last month after an upwardly revised 0.2% ‌gain in December, the Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics said on Thursday. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast import prices, which exclude tariffs, climbing 0.2% after a previously reported 0.1% rise in December.

In the ​12 months through January, import prices dipped 0.1% after being unchanged in December. The ​report was delayed by the shutdown of the government last year. The 43-day ⁠shutdown prevented the collection of survey data for October, resulting in the BLS not ​publishing the monthly changes in import prices for October and November.

BLS said the effects of the ​2025 government shutdown would continue to delay publication the import prices data reports.

Imported fuel prices fell 2.2% in January after declining 1.1% in the prior month. Food prices rose 0.2%. Excluding fuels and food, import prices ​shot up 0.5%. The so-called core import prices increased 0.3% in December.

In the 12 months ​through January, core import prices advanced 1.6%, partly reflecting the dollar's weakness against the currencies of the main ‌U.S. ⁠trade partners.

The trade-weighted dollar declined 7.37% in 2025 and is down about 1.61% so far this year. Prices for imported capital goods prices increased 0.4%, mostly driven by a 0.5% jump in nonelectrical machinery.

Imported consumer goods excluding motor vehicles edged up 0.1%. Prices for motor vehicles, parts ​and engines gained 0.2%.

Import ​air passenger fares decreased ⁠10.1% after increasing 6.4% as lower Asian and Latin American/Caribbean fares more than offset higher European fares. Airfares are among components that

go into the ​calculation of the Personal Consumption Expenditures price indexes, the inflation measures tracked ​by the ⁠U.S. central bank for its 2% target.

Though government data last month showed a marginal increase in consumer prices in January, producer inflation accelerated.

Prior to the import price data, economists estimated that the core ⁠PCE ​price index rose by as much as 0.5% in ​January, which would translate into a year-on-year increase of 3.1%.

Core PCE inflation increased 0.4% in December and advanced 3.0% year-on-year. ​The government will publish the delayed PCE inflation report for January next Friday.

Reporting by Lucia Mutikani

Source: Reuters


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