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PIMCO Managing Director and Economist Tiffany Wilding reacts to the US core consumer price index report that showed underlying inflation rose in September at the slowest pace in three months. She predicts the Federal Reserve will cut rates again in October, but won't be able to provide much guidance due to the lack of economic data.

The US government shutdown has become the second-longest in history as the stalemate between the two parties over expiring health-care subsidies persists. Lawmakers and congressional aides say they see a real possibility the closure could surpass the 35-day shutdown of Trump's first term.

David Kelly, chief global strategist at JPMorgan Asset Management, breaks down the US CPI report for September as he expects the Federal Reserve to “keep on cutting rates.” -------- More on Bloomberg Television and Markets Like this video?
US stocks advanced on Friday after softer inflation data bolstered optimism that the Federal Reserve will maintain its rate-cutting trajectory, reinforcing hopes of continued economic support and higher equity valuations. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 228 points, or 0.5%, while the S&P 500 gained 0.6% to hit a new record.
US consumer prices rose less than expected in September, offering fresh evidence that inflation pressures continue to moderate and bolstering expectations the Federal Reserve could begin easing rates later this year. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) increased 0.3% from August and 3% from a year earlier, below forecasts of 0.4% and 3.1%, respectively, the Labor Department said on Friday.

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Kevin Hincks says shelter prices softening was a big component to the latest CPI data being slightly lower than expected. September's delayed inflation print was released Friday after furloughed BLS employees were brought back to compile the data.
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The US consumer price index (CPI) rose 0.3% in September from the previous month, bringing the annual inflation rate to 3%, the Labor Department said on Friday. The reading came in marginally below economists' expectations of a 0.4% monthly gain and a 3.1% annual increase, according to a Dow Jones survey.
If the fourth quarter is to outperform as history suggests, then loads of individual stocks (like MU) will need to flourish.

The Consumer Price Index should have been released on Oct. 15, but economic data has been halted by the government shutdown.

Michael Contopoulos, Richard Bernstein Advisors deputy CIO, and David Seif, Nomura chief economist for developed markets, join 'Squawk Box' to break down the September CPI data, impact on the Fed's interest rate decision, state of the economy, and more.

Underlying US inflation rose by less than expected in September, increasing 0.2% from August, the slowest pace in three months. On an annual basis, it advanced 3%.

US stock futures rally as soft CPI data boosts Fed rate cut hopes. Tech stocks surge while earnings from Intel and P&G add bullish momentum.
Increase was largely driven by a 4.1% increase in gasoline prices despite Trump's campaign pledge to ‘end inflation'

CNBC's Rick Santelli joins 'Squawk Box' to break down the September CPI data.
The central bank, unaffected by an ongoing government shutdown, will meet Oct. 28 and Oct. 29 to discuss whether to lower interest rates again. The Fed voted 11-1 in September to lower rates by a quarter-point to between 4% and 4.25%, and minutes from the meeting released earlier this month indicated that policymakers were split on how many additional rate cuts were necessary this year.

MP Materials stock and other rare-earth producers were gaining as investors bet the U.S. will continue to build a domestic supply chain for the minerals.

Based on macro variables in-place, the net effect suggests a stagflation, likely to transition to a recession; The recent soft data, hard data, and the cross-asset performance all confirm the outlook - all except the stock market. The S&P500 is trading a bubble-like valuation, led by the AI trade, facing a recession, which is likely to result in a recessionary bear market, deepened by the bubble burst.

Consumer prices rose 3% from a year earlier, the Labor Department said, hotter than August's increase of 2.9%. Economists had expected a rise of 3.1%