Inflation Plunges In Biggest Monthly Drop Since 2020
ONP Summary
The US Consumer Price Index declined to 3.5% in June from 4.2% in May—the largest single-month drop since April 2020—driven primarily by falling energy prices following a temporary US-Iran ceasefire. The agreement has since collapsed and oil prices are climbing again, limiting the scope of relief amid elevated household costs.
Progressive: Temporary respite — progressive outlets welcome cooling inflation but stress relief is limited as many household costs remain stubbornly high.
Moderate: Energy-dependent volatility — moderate outlets note the decline is substantial but fragile, driven entirely by volatile oil markets vulnerable to geopolitical disruption.
Conservative: Diplomatic breakthrough — conservative outlets celebrate the significant magnitude of decline as a success of the preliminary US-Iran agreement.
Year-over-year inflation fell for the first time since January, dropping down to 3.5% in June, according to data released on Tuesday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
It was the steepest monthly drop since April 2020, when prices fell 0.8% during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Consumer prices fell 0.4% in June after rising ...
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