Inflation data for March showed an acceleration from the previous month, though figures landed marginally below Wall Street’s most pessimistic forecasts. The Consumer Price Index climbed to 3.3% on an annual basis, representing a significant jump from February’s 2.4% reading.
Month-to-month, consumer prices surged 0.9%. This marks the most substantial single-month acceleration since 2022. Wall Street analysts had anticipated a 3.4% yearly increase and a 0.9% monthly advance, per Bloomberg consensus estimates.
The previous instance of headline inflation matching or exceeding the 3% threshold occurred in September 2025.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics published the figures Friday morning. Financial markets responded favorably to the release, with equity indexes moving higher after the announcement.
The S&P 500 climbed 0.11% while the Nasdaq advanced 0.56%. The Dow Jones declined 0.44%.
The primary catalyst was energy-related expenses. The gasoline component skyrocketed 21.2% within a single month. The Labor Department noted this category alone represented approximately three-quarters of the overall monthly CPI gain.
This represents the most dramatic monthly gasoline price escalation since government record-keeping commenced in 1967.
The price shock stems from the continuing U.S.-Israel military engagement with Iran. The confrontation has effectively blocked the Strait of Hormuz, a vital passage for international petroleum shipments. U.S. crude oil prices experienced peak gains of 70% throughout the crisis.
Air travel costs increased 2.7% compared to February. Food categories remained unchanged overall, although tomatoes surged 15.3% while hot dogs decreased 3.6%.
Core CPI, which excludes volatile food and energy components, advanced only 0.2% on a monthly basis. This fell short of the anticipated 0.3% increase. On an annual comparison, core inflation registered 2.6%, marginally below the 2.7% consensus estimate.
Service sector inflation demonstrated softness in March. Medical goods categories also contributed to restraining the broader core measurement.
Alexandra Wilson-Elizondo from Goldman Sachs Asset Management characterized the in-line figure as “a slight relief” for investors who had prepared for more troubling results.
She cautioned, however, that March’s figures may capture only a portion of the Iran conflict’s complete economic impact.
Claudia Sahm, economist at New Century Advisors, labeled the present conditions as a “whiplash economy.”
The Federal Reserve is anticipated to maintain current interest rates at its upcoming April 28-29 policy meeting. Fed officials have indicated they may disregard portions of the petroleum-driven price increases, especially if the phenomenon proves transitory.
Probabilities for a subsequent rate reduction improved after the CPI data release, based on market pricing.
Brent crude traded at $96.16 while U.S. crude stood at $98.55 when the report was published.
The post March 2026 Inflation Spikes to 3.3% as Energy Costs Soar Amid Geopolitical Crisis appeared first on Blockonomi.


