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{"aggregator_url":"https://www.nasdaq. {"aggregator_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/march-cpi-came-33-gasoline-alone-added-over-half-percentage-point-here-what-tells","as_of":"2026-04-10T15:51:15.884890+00:00","canonical_url":"https://www.fool.com/investing/2026/04/10/march-cpi-came-in-at-33-gasoline-alone-added-over/","enrichment":{"aggregator_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/march-cpi-came-33-gasoline-alone-added-over-half-percentage-point-here-what-tells","article_chars":4962,"article_truncated":false,"blocked_reason":null,"candidate_id":"sc_b7ae8b05f9a713ba","canonical_host":"fool.com","canonical_is_aggregator":false,"canonical_url":"https://www.fool.com/investing/2026/04/10/march-cpi-came-in-at-33-gasoline-alone-added-over/","content_type":"text/html; charset=utf-8","enriched_at":"2026-04-10T17:19:14.978044+00:00","extraction_method":"heuristic","fetched_description":"Key PointsEnergy prices spiked from the Iran war in March, but core inflation was steady.","fetched_title":"March CPI Came In at 3.3%. Gasoline Alone Added Over Half a Percentage Point. Here Is What That Tells Investors About What Could Come Next | Nasdaq","final_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/march-cpi-came-33-gasoline-alone-added-over-half-percentage-point-here-what-tells","html_truncated":false,"paywall_likely":false,"publisher_domain":"fool.com","publisher_resolution":"canonical_url","requested_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/march-cpi-came-33-gasoline-alone-added-over-half-percentage-point-here-what-tells","source_event_id":"evt_1e6808e8ce01","source_quality":"high","status_code":200,"version":"signal_enrichment_v2"},"fp":"208220456b4dc932","kind":"unusual_volume","published_at":"2026-04-10T15:27:47+00:00","publisher_domain":"fool.com","signal_understanding":{"analysis_basis":"article","claim_confidence":0.72,"dates_mentioned":["April 10, 2026"],"entities":[{"asset_class":"macro","name":"Consumer Price Index (CPI)","relevance":"high","symbol":"","type":"macro_indicator"},{"asset_class":"macro","name":"Federal Reserve (Fed)","relevance":"high","symbol":"","type":"institution"},{"asset_class":"macro","name":"CME Group FedWatch tool","relevance":"medium","symbol":"","type":"data_tool"},{"asset_class":"macro","name":"Jerome Powell","relevance":"medium","symbol":"","type":"person"}],"event_type":"macro_policy","information_gaps":["This signal type is 'discovery_unusual_volume_delta', but the provided text contains no ticker-specific volume ratio, baseline volume, or any unusual volume metrics.","The article mentions a list of tickers at the top (AAPL, TSLA, AMZN, META, AMD, NVDA, PEP, COST, ADBE, GOOG, AMGN, HON, INTC, INTU, NFLX, ADP, SBUX, MRNA), but the body does not connect CPI/energy news to any specific stock\u2019s volume change.","No explicit statement confirms whether any 'unusual volume' occurred; the text only discusses macro/inflation implications and rate-cut expectations."],"key_facts":["March CPI increased 3.3% year over year and 0.9% month over month.","Headline CPI was slightly below expectations at 3.4%.","Energy prices spiked in March due to the war in Iran and the closing of the Strait of Hormuz (as described).","Gasoline was up 21.2% from February; fuel oil was up 30.7% from the previous month.","Core inflation (excluding food and energy) was steady at 2.6% year over year (vs 2.5% in February) and rose 0.2% month over month.","The article states investors\u2019 rate cut bets were flat; the odds of a Fed rate cut by end of year held steady, with rates remaining where they are rising from 71.1% to 72.3% per CME FedWatch.","The article characterizes the inflation shock as primarily energy-driven/short-term rather than sustained, and says the market is monitoring oil/inflation given the situation remains fluid even after a ceasefire agreement."],"numeric_claims":[{"label":"CPI YoY (March)","value":"3.3%"},{"label":"CPI MoM (March)","value":"0.9%"},{"label":"Headline CPI expectation (stated)","value":"3.4%"},{"label":"Core inflation YoY","value":"2.6%"},{"label":"Core inflation YoY prior month (stated)","value":"2.5%"},{"label":"Core inflation MoM","value":"0.2%"},{"label":"Gasoline change vs February","value":"21.2%"},{"label":"Fuel oil change vs previous month","value":"30.7%"},{"label":"FedWatch odds rates remain where they are (71.1% to 72.3%)","value":"71.1% to 72.3%"}],"primary_claim":"March CPI rose 3.3% year over year, and the increase was driven nearly entirely by higher fuel prices (gasoline up 21.2% from February; fuel oil up 30.7%).","relevance_score":0.55,"sentiment":"mixed","source_quality":"high","summary":"The article discusses March CPI rising to 3.3% YoY, with the increase driven largely by energy\u2014especially gasoline\u2014linked to the Iran/Strait of Hormuz situation. It argues investors largely shrugged off the headline and kept rate-cut expectations broadly unchanged, implying the inflation shock may be viewed as short-term.","topics":["CPI","inflation","energy prices","gasoline","Iran war","Strait of Hormuz","Fed rate cut expectations","consumer spending","recession risk"]},"source":"Nasdaq Markets","source_domain":"fool.com","summary":"Key PointsEnergy prices spiked from the Iran war in March, but core inflation was steady.","tickers":[],"title":"March CPI Came In at 3.3%. Gasoline Alone Added Over Half a Percentage Point. Here Is What That Tells Investors About What Could Come Next","url":"https://www.fool.com/investing/2026/04/10/march-cpi-came-in-at-33-gasoline-alone-added-over/"}... |