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Calm CPI Prints Are Already Obsolete The Moment Oil Spikes Hit Pump Prices

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The February 2026 inflation report looked boring on purpose. Then oil blew through triple-digit fear and the report became a museum piece. Calm CPI prints cannot survive contact with a Hormuz crisis; they only measure the world before the first tanker got stuck.

The last print is a baseline, not a forecast

NBC News on March 11, 2026 reported that February inflation stayed steady at 0.3% month over month and 2.4% year over year, with core at 2.5% annually, but noted the release landed as the Iran war drove gas prices up. The New York Times on March 9, 2026 tied rising oil to worldwide economic hazard from the conflict. The Times on March 5, 2026 described retail gasoline jumping sharply in a week as crude spiked. Those dates matter: the CPI window closes before the pump shock fully registers.

Markets will read the next print as the first honest war read

CNBC on March 9, 2026 called the U.S.-Iran war the biggest oil supply disruption in history, with Brent and WTI surging past $110. When energy moves that fast, headline CPI lags by design. The Bureau of Labor Statistics counts prices that already happened; it does not front-run a strait closure. Traders know that, which is why the calm print does not calm anyone who buys diesel.

Pass-through is the mechanism that breaks the baseline

The New York Times on March 9, 2026 explained that elevated fuel can linger for months, lifting groceries and shipped goods. That is the channel that turns a geopolitical spike into a kitchen-table print. The February 2026 numbers NBC cited cannot capture March’s pass-through; they only prove what inflation looked like before the war taxed mobility.

What This Actually Means

The pitch is that the February CPI is a pre-war baseline and the next release becomes the first real conflict read. NBC’s February figures, the Times’ oil-economy pieces, and CNBC’s disruption framing all support that timeline. Policymakers will cite the calm print; voters will cite the pump. Both can be true because they measure different weeks.

Sources

The New York Times The New York Times The New York Times NBC News CNBC

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