Source:
Bureau of Labor StatisticsOn a seasonally adjusted basis, the CPI-U increased 0.3 percent in January after declining in each of the
three previous months. The energy index climbed 1.7 percent in January, its first increase in six months, but it was still 31.4 percent below its July 2008 peak level. Within energy, the gasoline index rose 6.0 percent in January after a 19.3 percent decline in December. However, some energy components continued to decline; the fuel oil index fell 3.7 percent in January and the index for natural gas declined 3.6 percent. The food index, which rose sharply during the summer and moderated through the fall, increased 0.1 percent in January after being virtually unchanged in December. The food index has risen 5.3 percent over the past year.
Read more:
http://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/cpi.pdf
It's odd to see an increase in prices as a good sign, but with this small increase, and the larger than expected increase for the
January Producer Price Index perhaps deflation is not as much a worry as many have feared. On the other hand, this could all just be a last ditch effort by producers and stores to compensate for slower sales.