Cơ bản
Giao ngay
Giao dịch tiền điện tử một cách tự do
Giao dịch ký quỹ
Tăng lợi nhuận của bạn với đòn bẩy
Chuyển đổi và Đầu tư định kỳ
0 Fees
Giao dịch bất kể khối lượng không mất phí không trượt giá
ETF
Sản phẩm ETF có thuộc tính đòn bẩy giao dịch giao ngay không cần vay không cháy tải khoản
Giao dịch trước giờ mở cửa
Giao dịch token mới trước niêm yết
Futures
Truy cập hàng trăm hợp đồng vĩnh cửu
TradFi
Vàng
Một nền tảng cho tài sản truyền thống
Quyền chọn
Hot
Giao dịch với các quyền chọn kiểu Châu Âu
Tài khoản hợp nhất
Tối đa hóa hiệu quả sử dụng vốn của bạn
Giao dịch demo
Giới thiệu về Giao dịch hợp đồng tương lai
Nắm vững kỹ năng giao dịch hợp đồng từ đầu
Sự kiện tương lai
Tham gia sự kiện để nhận phần thưởng
Giao dịch demo
Sử dụng tiền ảo để trải nghiệm giao dịch không rủi ro
Launch
CandyDrop
Sưu tập kẹo để kiếm airdrop
Launchpool
Thế chấp nhanh, kiếm token mới tiềm năng
HODLer Airdrop
Nắm giữ GT và nhận được airdrop lớn miễn phí
Launchpad
Đăng ký sớm dự án token lớn tiếp theo
Điểm Alpha
Giao dịch trên chuỗi và nhận airdrop
Điểm Futures
Kiếm điểm futures và nhận phần thưởng airdrop
Đầu tư
Simple Earn
Kiếm lãi từ các token nhàn rỗi
Đầu tư tự động
Đầu tư tự động một cách thường xuyên.
Sản phẩm tiền kép
Kiếm lợi nhuận từ biến động thị trường
Soft Staking
Kiếm phần thưởng với staking linh hoạt
Vay Crypto
0 Fees
Thế chấp một loại tiền điện tử để vay một loại khác
Trung tâm cho vay
Trung tâm cho vay một cửa
Inflation Stayed Steady Ahead Of Iran War
Key Takeaways
Get personalized, AI-powered answers built on 27+ years of trusted expertise.
ASK
A key measure of inflation stayed steady in February before the war in Iran sent gas prices soaring.
The cost of living as measured by the Consumer Price Index rose 2.4% over 12 months in February, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said Wednesday. That was the same annual increase as in January and matched forecasts from a survey of economists by Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal. “Core” prices, excluding the volatile categories of food and energy, rose 2.5% over the year, also the same as the previous month and in line with expectations.
The report showed inflation’s trajectory remained steady ahead of the war in Iran, which has driven national average gasoline prices up by more than 50 cents a gallon over the last two weeks. Fighting has disrupted shipping from the oil-producing region.
What This Means For The Economy
Inflation remained in its recent pattern, staying stubbornly above the Fed’s 2% goal but not surging out of control—but the Iran war has shaken up the outlook.
“We should think of this as an inflation floor for the coming months, not a sign of what’s to come,” Jake Krimmel, senior economist at Realtor.com, wrote in a commentary. “Today’s report establishes the cleanest baseline we are likely to see before new price pressures form and grow this spring.”
Inflation has stubbornly remained above the Federal Reserve’s 2% annual target as tariffs have pushed up prices for some goods, even as housing inflation has cooled. Inflation surged in late 2021 as the economy reopened from COVID-19 restrictions and has yet to cool down to pre-pandemic levels.
Tariff-sensitive categories rose, including apparel, which went up 1.3% over the month, and household furnishings, which rose 0.3%. Groceries rose 0.4%, while dining out rose 0.3%.
The deceleration of housing inflation continued, with shelter prices only rising 0.2% over the month, the same as in January, and rent rising 0.1%, the lowest monthly increase since January 2021.
Going forward, the inflation outlook depends on how long the Iran war lasts, and especially whether shipping resumes through the Strait of Hormuz. An estimated 20% of the world’s oil supply travels through the narrow channel, which has been virtually closed because of the threat of Iranian attacks on ships. Not only is gas a major item in household budgets, but higher fuel costs can also push up prices for other goods and services, since most economic activities rely on motor vehicles.
What Does This Mean For the Fed?
The relatively tame inflation report is unlikely to convince Federal Reserve officials to lower interest rates in the coming months, economists said.
Fed officials are instead likely to keep the central bank’s key interest rate higher for longer as they wait to see how the war affects prices. The fed funds rate affects borrowing costs across all kinds of loans, and Fed officials have kept it elevated since 2022 to discourage borrowing and spending and quell inflation. The Fed cut rates late last year to help boost the faltering job market, but has remained in “wait-and-see” mode since its last meeting in January.
Related Education
What Is the Consumer Price Index (CPI)?
Inflation: What It Is and How to Control Inflation Rates
The uncertainty of the Iran war is likely to discourage the Fed from making any moves anytime soon, economists said.
“The February consumer price index is unlikely to move the needle on the outlook for monetary policy, as it’s only just a snapshot of prices immediately before the U.S./Israel-Iran war, which will lead to much stronger headline inflation in March,” Bernard Yaros, lead US economist at Oxford Economics, wrote in a commentary.
Update, March 11, 2026—This story has been updated with additional detail from the CPI report and commentary from economists.
Do you have a news tip for Investopedia reporters? Please email us at
[email protected]