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US Inflation Sees Largest Single-Month Decline Since April 2020

US Inflation Sees Largest Single-Month Decline Since April 2020

US Inflation Sees Largest Single-Month Decline Since April 2020

Imesh Ranasinghe

Imesh Ranasinghe

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Catenaa, Tuesday, July 14, 2026- US inflation declined 0.4% in June, in the largest single-month decline since April 2020.

The Consumer Price Index, released Tuesday, showed inflation declined 0.4% on a monthly basis in June. Annual inflation also eased to 3.5%, the government said, in the lowest yearly reading since March.

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg had expected inflation to fall just 0.1% from May and rise 3.8% from a year ago, a moderation from May’s bruising report as gas prices eased thanks to a now-disintegrating ceasefire in the war with Iran.

Indeed, the index for energy prices tumbled 5.7% in June, while the gasoline index fell 9.7%, though both remain much hotter than a year ago. Food prices, meanwhile, ticked up 0.2%, with lettuce and fish costs driving higher.

“The renewed war in Iran will almost certainly push inflation back up. Relief could be short-lived. But this should give the Federal Reserve some time to wait and see for a while,” Heather Long, Chief Economist at the Navy Federal Credit Union, posted on X.

On a “core” basis, stripping out volatile energy and food categories, price growth slid to 2.6% on an annual basis, and was flat for the month. Economists had seen inflation rising 0.2% from May and 2.8% from last year.

The CPI report comes just before Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh is set to face questioning for the first time on Capitol Hill Tuesday, with inflation a key focus. 

The data also dropped alongside a slew of blowout earnings reports from JPMorgan, Bank of America, and other banks, with results pointing to a resilient economy.