Wholesale prices were flat in November, providing a leading indicator that inflation is easing, the Labor Department reported Wednesday.
Excluding food, energy and trade services, PPI increased 0.1%, posting a sixth straight increase and good for a 12-month gain of 2.5%.
The release comes a day after the Labor Department said its consumer price index rose just 0.1% in November and 3.1% from a year ago.
The PPI gauges the prices producers receive for what they produce while CPI measures what consumers pay and is considered a leading signal for prices in the pipeline.
At the wholesale level, indexes for both goods and services were unchanged, though there were some big swings within components.
Persons:
Dow Jones
Organizations:
Labor Department, PPI, Federal Reserve, CNBC PRO