U.S. core inflation may fall to 5-year low in report out Friday
[February 13, 2026] By
CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
WASHINGTON (AP) — A measure of inflation may have fallen to a five-year
low in January as rental costs have cooled, a sign that some prices are
moderating while Americans continue to grapple with a big rise in
overall prices in the past five years.
Inflation is forecast to have fallen to a 2.4% annual rate in January
from 2.7% in December in the latest government report on consumer prices
to be issued Friday. That would be the lowest rate in nine months. Core
prices, which exclude the volatile food and gas categories, are expected
to decline to 2.5% from 2.6%, the lowest in nearly five years, according
to data provider FactSet.
On a monthly basis, inflation may show signs of remaining elevated:
Overall and core prices are expected to rise 0.3% in January from
December, a pace that if maintained for several months would start to
push annual inflation higher.
Friday's report may point to cooling inflation, but it comes after the
cost of food, gas, and apartment rents have soared since the pandemic,
with consumer prices about 25% higher than they were five years ago. The
increase in such a broad range of costs has become a high-profile
political issue under the rubric of “affordability.”

If inflation gets closer to the Federal Reserve's target of 2%, it could
allow the central bank to cut its key short-term interest rate further
this year, as Trump has repeatedly demanded. High borrowing costs for
things like mortgages and auto loans have also contributed to a
perception that many big-ticket items remain out of reach for many
Americans.
In January, economists expect that gas prices will have declined, while
the cost of groceries could rise again after they jumped in December.
Overall prices could increase by more than expected, economists say,
because costs often rise more in January than other months as companies
reset their prices at the beginning of the year.
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A shopper looks at produce at a grocery store Tuesday, Feb. 10,
2026, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Erin Hooley)
 Inflation surged to 9.1% in 2022 as
consumer spending soared at the same time supply chains snarled in
the wake of the pandemic. It began to fall in 2023 but leveled off
around 3% in mid-2024 and has since barely improved.
Inflation cooled a bit this fall, though some of that reflected the
disruptions of the six-week government shutdown in October. The
shutdown disrupted the government's data collection and led them to
estimate price changes in November for housing that most economists
say artificially lowered inflation that month.
At the same time, measures of wage growth have declined in the past
year or so as hiring has cratered. With companies reluctant to add
jobs, workers don't have as much leverage to demand raises. Smaller
pay increases can reduce inflationary pressures as companies often
raise prices to offset higher wages.
More modest wage growth is a big reason that many economists expect
inflation to continue easing this year.
“We're not expecting inflation to start up again by any stretch,”
said Luke Tilley, chief economist for Wilmington Trust.
Many businesses are still eating some tariff costs and economists
expect they may raise prices more in the next few months to offset
those extra expenses. Still, most forecast that inflation will
decline further by the second half of the year and drop closer to
the Fed's 2% target by the end of 2026.
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