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Inflation double feature: two data prints that could rewrite market rate-cut fantasy

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February 7, 2026
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Wall Street’s favourite macro assumption that inflation will cool “enough” to let the Federal Reserve cut rates on a predictable timetable faces a real stress test in the coming weeks.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics will publish January’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) next week on February 13, followed by the Producer Price Index (PPI) on February 27.

Traders don’t need headline inflation to re-accelerate to rethink policy, they need the pace of improvement to stall.

Both prints therefore carry outsized power to reprice rates, stocks, and the dollar.

Inflation double feature: CPI first, PPI a late-stage spoiler

CPI is the front line. It measures prices paid by consumers, the grocery bill, gasoline, rents, and services, and is the yardstick that most directly shapes households’ inflation expectations.

Investors will look past the headline month-on-month number to the core readings (which strip out volatile food and energy) and stubborn components such as housing and services that historically persist.

A hotter-than-expected core CPI could force markets to push out expected cut dates.

Even a smaller-than-forecast decline will be interpreted as “disinflation stalling.”

PPI plays spoiler duty. Producer prices capture what firms pay for goods and inputs before products hit the checkout counter.

If PPI shows a pickup in goods or intermediate inputs, it signals that the relief consumers felt from falling goods prices may be temporary.

In short, while the CPI tells you what inflation was for the consumer, the PPI hints at what might show up there next.

The BLS calendar has the PPI release later this month, making it the perfect follow-up to the CPI read.

How markets will likely read the prints

If core CPI stays firm and PPI shows pipeline pressure, expect a quick hawkish repricing.

Front-end Treasury yields would likely rise first as the two-year yield is the most sensitive to near-term Fed moves.

That yields-up move tends to hammer long-duration growth stocks while giving a relative lift to cyclicals and financials if the surprise is read as growth rather than policy risk.

Conversely, evidence of renewed disinflation across services and pipeline prices would cement the market’s “cuts are coming” narrative and likely flatten front yields and support risk assets.

Reuters notes markets still expect multiple cuts in 2026, a backdrop that amplifies today’s sensitivity to upside surprises.

Traders don’t need a single print to “break” markets. Often, a mixed CPI and PPI sequence is enough.

For example, a soft CPI headline but firmer services components, or a tame CPI followed by an upside PPI surprise, forces nuance.

That ambiguity increases volatility as investors race to reprice probabilities across rate cuts, growth scenarios, and dollar strength.

Where the market is most fragile

Investors will keep a close eye on this short list in real time:

  • 2-year and 10-year Treasury yields: front-end moves signal policy repricing.
  • Dollar strength versus major peers: an inflation surprise often means a stronger dollar.
  • Rate-sensitive equities: mega-cap growth, homebuilders, and small caps will diverge sharply.
  • Volatility and credit spreads: they show whether moves are orderly or turning into a genuine risk-off episode.

The real test for the rate-cut story

The upcoming numbers are less a single trial than an unfolding judgment.

CPI sets the narrative, while PPI can validate or complicate it. Policymakers will parse both, but markets will act faster.

If inflation simply stops improving, the investors are expected to reprice the timing and scale of cuts.

That’s the practical risk: not a surprise spike, but the loss of the comfortable arc toward easier policy.

The next few prints won’t just populate charts, they will rewrite expectations about the path of rates and risk for months to come.

The post Inflation double feature: two data prints that could rewrite market rate-cut fantasy appeared first on Invezz


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