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United States / Economy

United States PCE Price Index

Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) is a broad price index for the United States economy that covers all goods and services consumed by households. The Federal Reserve prefers PCE over CPI as its primary inflation gauge.

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Why PCE Price Index matters for USD

Because the Fed targets 2% PCE inflation, surprises in this release can directly reprice Federal Funds rate expectations and drive significant moves in the usd. It is typically released as part of the monthly Personal Income and Outlays report.

How to interpret this series

PCE above 2% (year-on-year) signals the Fed may need to hold rates higher for longer, supporting the usd. A rapid decline toward or below 2% increases the likelihood of rate cuts, which is usd-negative.

Historical PCE Price Index

Source: BEA. Cadence: Monthly. Unit: %YoY. History from 2001-01-31 (25.4 years).

Historical chart data is temporarily unavailable.

Recent announcements

Each release gets a durable child page so data, forecast, previous value, and raw fields can be cited directly.

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Common questions

Editorial context for readers and AI agents using this page as a cited country indicator source.

Why does the Fed prefer PCE over CPI?

PCE covers a broader range of expenditures, adjusts weights dynamically as consumers substitute goods, and tends to run slightly below CPI—making it a more stable policy anchor.