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U.S. September PCE Inflation Hits 2.8% Exactly as Forecasted – First Core Decline Since Spring
The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis released September 2025 Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) data on October 31, showing headline inflation rose 0.3% month-over-month and 2.8% year-over-year — matching consensus estimates to the decimal. Core PCE (excluding food and energy), the Federal Reserve’s preferred gauge, increased 0.2% MoM and 2.8% YoY, marking the first annual deceleration since April 2025 and keeping the disinflation trend intact.
Key Takeaways from the September PCE Report
Real consumer spending (inflation-adjusted) rose a modest 0.1% MoM after a downwardly revised 0.0% in August, reflecting cautious household behavior amid still-elevated borrowing costs.
Market Reaction
What It Means for Monetary Policy
The report keeps the Federal Reserve comfortably on track toward its 2% inflation target without signs of reacceleration. Chair Jerome Powell has repeatedly emphasized that core PCE trending below 2.8–2.9% would justify continued easing, and September’s first YoY slowdown since spring checks that box.
Most Wall Street economists (Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Bank of America) maintained forecasts for:
Bottom Line
September PCE delivered the “Goldilocks” outcome markets wanted: inflation cooling exactly as expected, no surprises, and real spending holding steady. Risk assets rallied, rate-cut odds rose, and the soft-landing narrative remains firmly intact heading into year-end.
For investors, the data removes near-term uncertainty and reinforces the current bullish bias across equities, Bitcoin, and other growth-sensitive assets.