The U.S. core inflation rate for September 2025 clocked in at 2.8% year-over-year—cooler than the anticipated 2.9%—according to the delayed Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) report released on December 5, 2025, providing a timely boost to Federal Reserve rate-cut expectations ahead of the December 10 FOMC meeting. This reading, the core Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index excluding volatile food and energy, marked a slight deceleration from August’s 2.9% and aligned with the headline PCE’s flat 2.8% annual print, underscoring a disinflationary trajectory despite persistent shelter and services pressures. The report’s lag—attributable to the 43-day federal government shutdown—delayed critical data collection, but its arrival reinforces a “soft landing” narrative, with markets now pricing a 90% probability of a 25-basis-point cut next week.
Breakdown of the September Data: Monthly Gains and Underlying Drivers
On a monthly basis, core PCE rose 0.2% in September—below the expected 0.3% and down from August’s 0.3%—while headline PCE edged up 0.3%, in line with forecasts, driven by a 1.1% gasoline spike offset by softer food prices (+0.25%). Personal income increased 0.4% month-over-month, outpacing spending’s 0.3% rise, leaving the personal savings rate steady at 4.7%—a sign of cautious consumer behavior amid elevated borrowing costs. Shelter inflation, a persistent drag at 3.2% annually, contributed to the core’s stickiness, but services excluding housing cooled to 0.2%, reflecting moderation in airfares and lodging.
The data’s release—originally slated for October 31—highlights the shutdown’s ripple effects, with BEA recalling furloughed staff for partial collections; nonetheless, the cooler-than-expected print eases fears of reacceleration, as core PCE now sits just 80 basis points above the Fed’s 2% target.
JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs: Forecasts Adjusted as Models Profit from Surprise
JPMorgan’s economic models, which had penciled in a 2.9% core PCE for September, benefited from the downside surprise, contributing to a 9% gain in their advisory performance for Q4 2025, per internal metrics cited in a Bloomberg note on December 6. The firm’s global research team now projects core PCE easing to 2.5% by late 2025—up from a prior 2.2% forecast—factoring in tariff passthroughs of 0.2-0.4 percentage points, yet maintaining two additional 25bps cuts in 2025 beyond December’s expected move. This adjustment reflects contained tariff effects thus far, with core goods inflation at 0.2% monthly, and positions JPMorgan’s fixed-income strategies for outperformance amid yield curve steepening.
Goldman Sachs, whose September forecast aligned closely at 2.9%, added an 8% boost to its quarterly advisory returns from the cooler print, as highlighted in a December 7 client update. The firm’s economists now anticipate core PCE decelerating to 2.4% by year-end—revised up from 2.0% due to a 10% across-the-board tariff scenario adding 0.4 points—while holding euro area core at 2% for late 2025. Goldman maintains a baseline of modest global growth at 2.6% for 2025, with U.S. tariffs offsetting fiscal stimuli but contained within specific subcomponents like core goods (+0.2% monthly).
Both firms’ models profited from the surprise—JPMorgan’s dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) framework and Goldman’s trimmed-mean CPI—highlighting the value of adaptive forecasting in a tariff-shadowed environment.
Labor Signals Mixed: Softening Hiring Amid Resilient Unemployment
Labor market indicators present a bifurcated picture, with September’s nonfarm payrolls adding 119,000 jobs—beating forecasts of 50,000 but signaling a summer slowdown’s persistence—while the unemployment rate edged up to 4.4% from 4.3%, reflecting increased labor force participation. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) report, delayed by the shutdown, showed health care (+33,000) and leisure/hospitality (+13,000) leading gains, offset by manufacturing (-12,000) and federal government (-8,000) losses, per the November 20 release. ADP’s private payrolls dipped -32,000 in November (preliminary), contrasting BLS’s September strength, with Challenger’s 71,000 November announcements underscoring AI/tech cuts (153,536 YTD).
Mixed signals abound: JOLTS openings rose modestly in October to 8.7 million after September’s surge, but quits fell to a five-year low of 2.94 million, indicating a “low-hire, low-fire” stasis per Reuters. Prime-age participation hit 83.5%, boosting the rate, yet long-term unemployed (1.8 million) held at 23.6% of total, per BLS. NFIB’s small-business optimism dipped to 94.5, while Conference Board’s confidence steadied at 102.5, signaling caution without collapse.
Fed and Market Implications: Rate Cut Odds Firm, But Path Forward Cautious
The cooler 2.8% core PCE—first sub-3% since January—bolsters the Fed’s soft-landing case, with CME FedWatch’s 90% December cut odds intact and projections for two more in 2026 to 3% funds rate. JPMorgan and Goldman revisions—2.5% and 2.4% late-2025—align with FOMC’s median 2.6% for 2026, though tariff risks (0.4pp add) loom. Markets reacted bullishly: S&P 500 +0.6% on release, 10-year yields -4bps to 4.15%, and DXY -0.3%.
Labor’s mixed bag—119K adds, 4.4% unemployment—supports easing without alarm, with BLS’s December 16 November report key for Q4 clarity. The 2.8% crest—models’ profit, signals’ swirl—heralds disinflation’s dawn, where Fed’s pivot tempers tariffs’ tide for 2026’s measured march.






