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#美国5月CPI创三年新高 U.S. May CPI Breaks 4% for the First Time in Over 3 Years: What Does It Mean? What Potential Impacts Could It Bring?
Boots Drop: U.S. May CPI Breaks "4" and Hits a Three-Year High, Why Is the Market Opposing the Bet?
1. Breakdown of Key Data: The Drivers Behind the "Breaking 4" Inflation June 10, 2026 (Wednesday), the U.S. Department of Labor released the highly anticipated May Consumer Price Index (CPI). The data shows that U.S. inflation pressures did not ease as the market expected but instead accelerated in rebound.
Energy is the Main "Villain"
This inflation rebound is not comprehensive but has significant structural features. Data indicates that energy prices are the primary force driving the overall CPI higher.
Energy Contribution: The energy index rose 3.9% month-over-month in May, accounting for over 60% of the total CPI increase that month. This is mainly due to disruptions in oil supply chains caused by tense Middle Eastern geopolitical tensions and rising gasoline prices (May gasoline prices increased approximately 7%-8.8% month-over-month).
Other Components: Food prices increased 0.2% month-over-month, and housing costs rose 0.3% month-over-month. Notably, the housing cost increase slowed from the previous month’s 0.6%, indicating that housing inflation pressures are gradually easing.
2. Market Reaction: Typical "Buy the Expectations, Sell the Facts"
Despite the CPI annual rate surpassing the key psychological threshold of 4% and hitting a three-year high, the financial market's response was surprisingly "calm," even showing a contrarian trend of selling the news.
1. Stock Market: Nasdaq Futures Narrow Losses Before Data Release, Market Worries About High Inflation Triggering Aggressive Fed Rate Hikes, Nasdaq futures once fell sharply (down over 1.5%). However, after the data was released, since the overall figures met expectations and core CPI monthly rate was below expectations, panic sentiment quickly cooled.
Reaction: Nasdaq futures quickly narrowed losses to about 0.9% (further narrowing to 0.47%), Dow Jones and S&P 500 futures also rebounded in tandem. In the spot market, although the three major U.S. indices ended lower due to Middle Eastern tensions (Nasdaq down about 1.98%), they all experienced significant surges immediately after the CPI release.
2. Bond and Forex Markets: Easing of Rate Hike Bets
U.S. Treasury Yields: The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield, often considered the "anchor of global asset pricing," shifted from gains to declines or remained volatile after the data, indicating that the bond market is not pricing in "more aggressive rate hikes."
U.S. Dollar Index: Slightly declined by about 0.05%-0.06%. Usually, high inflation supports the dollar, but this data release eliminated uncertainty, leading some safe-haven funds to flow out of the dollar.
3. Precious Metals: Falling First, Then Stabilizing
Gold/Silver: Spot gold had already fallen before the data release (drop exceeding 3%), and after the release, the decline remained in the 2.4%-2.9% range (around $4134-$4158 per ounce). This shows that the market had already priced in inflation risks, and gold prices did not further collapse after the negative news, instead gaining some support as the dollar weakened.
3. Deep Logic: Why Didn't "Bad Data" Trigger "Bad Market"? Although this CPI data (4.2%) looks ugly, the market reaction was relatively mild, mainly due to the following three reasons:
1. Successful Expectation Management: The 4.2% figure fully aligned with market consensus. In financial trading, "meeting expectations" often means the worst-case scenario has already been priced in, so panic selling is unlikely.
2. Controlled Core Inflation: The market pays more attention to the core CPI, which reflects endogenous inflation pressures. May’s core CPI monthly rate was only 0.2%, below the expected 0.3%. This signals to the market that, despite energy prices boosting the surface data, domestic consumption and service price pressures are actually easing, and the Fed may not need to immediately restart rate hikes.
3. Geopolitical Premium: The market generally considers this inflation spike as an "exogenous shock" caused by geopolitical conflicts, rather than "endogenous inflation" from overheating the economy. For inflation caused by temporary factors, the Fed tends to adopt a wait-and-see approach rather than immediate action.
4. Policy Outlook: The Fed’s Dilemma and Path Ahead With only a week left before the June 17 Federal Reserve meeting, this CPI report will serve as a key forward-looking indicator.
Likely to Maintain Watchfulness: CME’s "Fed Watch" tool shows that the market expects a 96.3%-98.3% probability that the Fed will keep rates unchanged in June. The moderate core inflation figures give the Fed confidence to hold steady.
Hawkish Risks: If Middle Eastern tensions keep oil prices high for an extended period, and subsequent PPI (Producer Price Index) data also strengthen, the Fed may reassess the need to hike rates again in July or September. Currently, the market estimates the probability of a 25 basis point rate hike before the end of the year ranges from about 30% to 70%, indicating significant divergence.