Squeezed from Both Sides: What February's PPI Says About the Escalation Trap Ahead
Input costs are running faster than bid prices. The Iran energy shock isn't in the data yet. And the commodity markets are already telling us where the next PPI reading is headed. The 3.7% year-over-year input number looks manageable. What's the real story? The year-over-year framing obscures the pace. Through just two months, construction input costs are running at a 12.6% annualized rate. That pace was set before the Iran conflict moved oil toward $100 per barrel. There is also a diesel tailwind embedded in the February headline that is already obsolete by the time you are reading this. The PPI has a hard measurement cutoff. The commodity markets do not. The table below reflects what is already in motion, a preview of where the next PPI reading is heading, not a refinement of this one. Diesel up 36.7% in a single month is the Iran war arriving in energy prices in real time. The February PPI still shows diesel as a tailwind. That tailwind is gone. PVC at ...