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United States announcement

United States Producer Price Index (PPI) 2026-04-14: data, chart, and analysis

The 2026-03-31 Producer Price Index (PPI) release printed 3.7. The previous reading was 3.5, while the forecast field is 3.48. Traders usually read this release against the recent trend, the Federal Reserve policy bias, and the surprise versus consensus.

Actual
3.7
Previous
3.5
Forecast
3.48

FXMacroData Blended Forecast

Public release ID
usd_ppi_2026-04-14

United States Producer Price Index (PPI) release chart

Market context, recent readings, and scenario notes for this announcement.

United States Producer Price Index (PPI) chart through 2026-03-31
USD Producer Price Index (PPI) readings through 2026-03-31. Latest: 3.7.
Indicator
Producer Price Index (PPI)
Released
April 30, 2026 13:00 UTC
Actual Value
4.40 %YoY
Prior
2.70 %YoY
Change
+1.70 %YoY

The United States Producer Price Index (PPI) for April 2026 delivered a notable jolt to financial markets, with the headline year-over-year figure accelerating sharply to 4.40%. This reading, released on April 30, 2026, at 13:00 UTC, represents a substantial increase from the prior month's 2.70% and signals persistent inflationary pressures within the economy. For FX traders, macro analysts, and portfolio managers, this data point is a critical indicator of upstream inflation, often preceding shifts in consumer prices and, consequently, monetary policy.

The unexpected surge in producer prices suggests that businesses continue to face elevated input costs, which are likely to be passed on to consumers in the coming months. This development has immediate implications for the US Dollar (USD), as it strengthens the case for a more hawkish stance from the Federal Reserve (Fed) in its ongoing battle against inflation. Market participants are now closely scrutinizing the Fed's potential responses, with the prospect of further tightening or a prolonged period of high interest rates becoming more pronounced.

Recent Readings

What Producer Price Index (PPI) Measures

The Producer Price Index (PPI) is a crucial economic indicator that measures the average change over time in the selling prices received by domestic producers for their output. Essentially, it tracks inflation at the wholesale level, reflecting price changes from the perspective of the seller. The PPI covers virtually all goods-producing industries and a significant portion of the services sector in the United States. It is compiled and reported monthly by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), a division of the U.S. Department of Labor.

Traders and analysts closely follow the PPI because it serves as a leading indicator for consumer inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI). When producers face higher costs, they often pass these increases on to consumers, making the PPI an early signal of future inflationary trends. It provides insights into the pricing power of businesses and the cost pressures permeating supply chains. A rising PPI typically indicates underlying inflationary forces, while a declining PPI can signal disinflationary or even deflationary pressures. Its components, such as finished goods, intermediate goods, and crude goods, offer a granular view into where price pressures are originating, allowing for a more nuanced understanding of economic dynamics.

Breaking Down the April 2026 Numbers

The April 2026 Producer Price Index report for the United States delivered a significant upside surprise, with the year-over-year figure climbing to 4.40%. This marks a substantial acceleration from the prior month's reading of 2.70%, representing a sharp increase of +1.70%. Such a pronounced jump in a single month is noteworthy and demands close attention from market participants.

Placing this latest figure into historical context, the 4.40% PPI reading is the highest observed in the provided recent data series. The trend over the past year has generally been one of rising prices, albeit with some fluctuations. After reaching 2.60% in June 2025, the PPI hovered around the 2.70-3.00% range through July, August, and September 2025. It then showed a brief uptick to 3.40% in October 2025, before moderating back to 2.70% in April 2025 (the prior year's value for the same month). The latest surge to 4.40% for April 2026 breaks this pattern decisively, indicating a renewed and intensified inflationary impulse at the producer level. This magnitude of change suggests that underlying cost pressures have not only persisted but have significantly intensified, moving well beyond the more moderate increases seen in recent months and pushing inflation expectations higher.

Impact on USD and FX Markets

The latest PPI data, showing a robust acceleration to 4.40% YoY, is unequivocally a bullish signal for the United States Dollar (USD). In the immediate aftermath of such an inflationary surprise, the FX market typically reacts by strengthening the USD against its major counterparts. This response stems from the expectation that higher producer prices will eventually translate into higher consumer prices, compelling the Federal Reserve to maintain a hawkish monetary policy stance, or even consider further interest rate hikes, to curb inflation.

Higher interest rates in the U.S. make USD-denominated assets more attractive to global investors, increasing demand for the currency. Consequently, FX pairs like EUR/USD would likely see downward pressure, as the Euro weakens relative to a stronger Dollar. Similarly, pairs such as GBP/USD and AUD/USD would typically trade lower. Conversely, currency pairs where the USD is the base currency, such as USD/JPY and USD/CHF, would tend to move higher. Emerging market currencies could also face headwinds as capital flows seek higher yields in the U.S. The magnitude of this PPI increase is significant enough to warrant a material re-evaluation of rate expectations, making the USD particularly sensitive to this kind of data release.

Monetary Policy Implications

The sharp acceleration in the Producer Price Index to 4.40% YoY for April 2026 presents a significant challenge for the Federal Reserve and has strong implications for its monetary policy path. The Fed's primary mandate includes price stability, and persistent, rising inflation at the producer level directly undermines this objective. Recent communications from Fed officials have consistently emphasized their commitment to bringing inflation back down towards their 2% target, even if it entails maintaining a restrictive policy for longer.

This PPI reading strongly supports a hawkish stance from the Federal Reserve. It suggests that inflationary pressures are not only entrenched but are actively intensifying, making the Fed's job of disinflation more difficult. The data points towards a scenario where the Fed will likely need to either consider further monetary policy tightening, such as additional interest rate hikes, or at the very least, delay any potential discussions about rate cuts for a prolonged period. This PPI surge makes it highly improbable for the Fed to consider any easing in the near term and instead reinforces the need for a sustained restrictive policy to prevent these upstream costs from fully translating into broader consumer price inflation.

Looking Ahead

The April 2026 PPI data, with its substantial jump to 4.40% YoY, sets a challenging tone for upcoming economic releases and Federal Reserve policy decisions. For the next PPI release, market participants will be keenly watching for any signs of moderation or further acceleration, with the current reading suggesting that upstream price pressures remain robust. Traders will be particularly focused on the core PPI components, which strip out volatile food and energy prices, to gauge underlying inflationary trends.

Beyond the PPI, the immediate focus shifts to the forthcoming Consumer Price Index (CPI) report. Given the strong PPI, there is an increased likelihood that this producer-level inflation will filter through to consumer prices, potentially leading to an elevated CPI reading. Other key releases that could compound or contradict this signal include the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price Index, which is the Fed's preferred inflation gauge, as well as retail sales figures and manufacturing surveys. Structural trends to watch include the ongoing stability of global supply chains, the trajectory of energy prices, and wage growth, all of which can contribute to sustained input cost pressures. Any hawkish commentary from Federal Reserve officials in the coming weeks will also be closely scrutinized for confirmation of policy implications stemming from this latest PPI shock.

Track This Release

Access the full Producer Price Index (PPI) time series for USD via the FXMacroData API:

curl "https://fxmacrodata.com/api/v1/announcements/usd/ppi?api_key=YOUR_API_KEY"

See the Producer Price Index (PPI) endpoint documentation for full details, or explore the live dashboard.

Producer Price Index (PPI) release read

The 2026-03-31 Producer Price Index (PPI) release printed 3.7. The previous reading was 3.5, while the forecast field is 3.48. Traders usually read this release against the recent trend, the Federal Reserve policy bias, and the surprise versus consensus.

The forecast marker for this release is 3.48 from FXMacroData Blended Forecast. That gives the release a clean actual-versus-expected reference point instead of forcing readers to move between the old release article, the API docs page, and the country indicator history.

The parent Producer Price Index (PPI) page shows the full time series for United States. This page narrows the record to the individual release, keeping the realised value, prior value, forecast field, announcement-date URL, and source payload together at one canonical URL.

For USD event-risk work, the important read is whether this print changes the recent trend or simply extends it. Compare the actual value with the previous and forecast fields above, then use the raw JSON below for backtests keyed to the stable announcement ID.

Release data snapshot

The values below are the citation fields for this announcement.

Public release ID usd_ppi_2026-04-14
API announcement ID usd_ppi_2026-03-31
Announcement date 2026-04-14
Reference period date 2026-03-31
Actual value 3.7
Previous value 3.5
Forecast 3.48 FXMacroData Blended Forecast
Surprise +0.22
Announcement timestamp 2026-04-14T08:30:00-04:00

API data for this announcement

The API endpoint returns the full United States Producer Price Index (PPI) history. Clients can filter by date or match this row by announcement_id.

Forecasts live in the predictions endpoint and use the same announcement identifier where available. That is the preferred join key for realised values, forecast surprises, and release-event backtests.

Raw announcement payload

Field names are preserved for traceability and downstream testing.

{
  "announcement_datetime": 1776169800,
  "announcement_datetime_local": "2026-04-14T08:30:00-04:00",
  "announcement_id": "usd_ppi_2026-03-31",
  "collected_at_iso": "2026-06-28T05:02:31.606234Z",
  "collected_at_ns": 1782622951606234321,
  "date": "2026-03-31",
  "forecast": 3.48,
  "forecast_source_label": "FXMacroData Blended Forecast",
  "ingestion_latency_ms": 6453151606.234,
  "ingestion_latency_reference": "official_actual_release_datetime",
  "official_actual_release_datetime": 1776169800,
  "official_actual_release_datetime_local": "2026-04-14T08:30:00-04:00",
  "prediction_type": "fxmacrodata",
  "previous_value": 3.5,
  "revisions": [
    {
      "epoch": 1776169800,
      "val": 3.6
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1778675454,
      "val": 3.7
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1778733110,
      "val": 3.7
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1778761832,
      "val": 3.7
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1778819546,
      "val": 3.7
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1778848268,
      "val": 3.7
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1778905963,
      "val": 3.7
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1778992324,
      "val": 3.7
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1779078726,
      "val": 3.7
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1779107405,
      "val": 3.7
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1779193805,
      "val": 3.7
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1779251519,
      "val": 3.7
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1779337925,
      "val": 3.7
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1779366602,
      "val": 3.7
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1779376092,
      "val": 3.7
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1779376146,
      "val": 3.7
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1779424307,
      "val": 3.7
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1779453038,
      "val": 3.7
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1779510763,
      "val": 3.7
    },
    {
      "epoch": 1779597167,
      "val": 3.7
    }
  ],
  "val": 3.7,
  "val_mom": 0.2
}