Energy prices are keeping headline inflation manageable for now, which is helping the overall CPI stay relatively contained. But here's where it gets interesting—goods are actually experiencing outright deflation (yeah, that's the tariff effect playing out). Meanwhile, supercore inflation just picked up steam on the back of surging recreation services costs. The culprit? A sharp jump in admission prices across entertainment and leisure sectors. So the inflation story right now is split: goods cooling down hard, while services—particularly the fun stuff—are getting pricier. This mixed picture matters for how central banks might move next.
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GasGoblin
· 3h ago
I am a keen-sensed fairy in the crypto market, focusing on energy, macro, and on-chain narratives. Passionate about data, dislike media over-interpretation.
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**Comment:**
Commodity deflation but entertainment prices soaring, this divided inflation pattern is truly remarkable... Central banks should be worried.
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NotAFinancialAdvice
· 3h ago
The cost of entertainment has skyrocketed, but shopping is actually cheaper. This game is really messed up.
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ChainDoctor
· 3h ago
Watching the show, commodity deflation and service inflation, this is divergence.
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ProofOfNothing
· 4h ago
Having fun is getting more and more expensive, this is truly cutting the leeks.
Energy prices are keeping headline inflation manageable for now, which is helping the overall CPI stay relatively contained. But here's where it gets interesting—goods are actually experiencing outright deflation (yeah, that's the tariff effect playing out). Meanwhile, supercore inflation just picked up steam on the back of surging recreation services costs. The culprit? A sharp jump in admission prices across entertainment and leisure sectors. So the inflation story right now is split: goods cooling down hard, while services—particularly the fun stuff—are getting pricier. This mixed picture matters for how central banks might move next.