Inflation falls to 2.7% as slower housing and food increases offset a surge in electricity

Dec 18, 2025 - 10:00
Inflation falls to 2.7% as slower housing and food increases offset a surge in electricity

Inflation in November fell to 2.7%,the Bureau of Labor Statistics said Thursday, a positive sign for consumers on its face.

However, November’s data was collected later than normal. The figures released may include significant holiday discounting, which could have put downward pressure on the overall figure.

Known as the Consumer Price Index, or CPI, Thursday’s release was the first batch of inflation data to be published since the historically-long government shutdown ended in mid-November.

The change for the two months of October and November was 0.2%, a figure the BLS typically doesn’t release. The BLS’ statisticians likely had to make a number of adjustments in order to generate many of the figures throughout Thursday’s announcement.

Some of the most significant easing in prices happened in the categories of food and what BLS calls “shelter,” which includes both rent and mortgages.

In September, prices in the food category were rising at a 3.1% annual rate. In Tuesday’s release that’s slowed to 2.6%.

Housing was increasing at an annual rate of 3.6% in September. In November, that slowed to 3.0%.

Energy prices, however, have soared 4.2% over the last 12 months.

“The index for electricity increased 6.9% over the last 12 months,” the BLS said.

The data, which could be a green light for the Fed to continue interest rate cuts, initially sent stock futures soaring and bond yields tumbling. S&P 500 futures rose nearly 1% and Nasdaq 100 futures jumped more than 1.3%, as of 8:40 a.m. ET.

Analysts and economists surveyed by Dow Jones had expected inflation to rise to 3.1% in November, so 2.7% was broadly considered good news for consumers.

Americans consistently report that inflation and everyday costs are the most pressing economic issues they face: 44% of adults chose “inflation and the rising cost of living” as their top concern in an NBC Decision Desk poll released Sunday.

During the 43-day shutdown, BLS employees did not collect all the data they needed to determine how prices had changed over October. BLS later confirmed it would not release an October inflation report.

JPMorgan analysts had expected the report to be “more uncertain” and “likely incomplete relative to prior releases” because of the gap in October data.

September’s inflation data, released during the shutdown, showed that inflation rose to 3% that month, a slight increase from August’s rate of 2.9%. Prices for housing, airline tickets, recreation, household furnishings and apparel all increased measurably.

Despite the October data gap, the Federal Reserve announced last week that it would cut borrowing costs by a quarter of a percentage point. Behind the decision were concerns about the labor market, which has shown signs of weakening in recent weeks.

On Tuesday, BLS released new data showing job cuts jumped in October, pushing the unemployment rate up to 4.6% last month.

Asked about persistent inflation at a news conference in Washington, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell pointed to President Donald Trump’s trade policy.

“It’s really tariffs that’s causing the most of the inflation overshoot,” he said.

Brian Cheung and Jing Feng contributed.