Economists projected that consumer spending slowed in April and that inflation cooled to 2.2%.
CNN  — 

American consumers reined in their spending and socked away their money in April following a tariff-fueled buying binge the month before, according to new data released Friday that also showed inflation cooled off again.

Friday’s report from the Commerce Department showed that consumer spending rose 0.2% last month, a weaker-than-anticipated reading but a notable retreat from March, when spending soared 0.7% as Americans front-loaded purchases — notably new cars — ahead of potential price increases from President Donald Trump’s tariffs.

In April, consumers saw a nice 0.8% boost to their incomes, a jump likely attributed to larger Social Security payments as well as continued resilience in the labor market; however, a lot of those funds were plunked into piggy banks: The personal saving rate leapt to 4.9% from 4.3%, according to Friday’s report.

“Just as you’d expect, consumers stayed away from the purchase of durable goods like clothing and cars and instead spent mostly on life’s necessities like housing, health care, and food services,” Chris Rupkey, chief economist at FwdBonds, wrote in commentary issued Friday. “This is a trade war report where the consumer is clearly gunshy.”

The latest data also showed inflation moving closer to the Federal Reserve’s target of 2%. However, it also indicated that tariff-related price pressures may be already hitting consumers.

The Personal Consumption Expenditures price index was 2.1% for the 12 months ended in April, a slowdown from the 2.3% annual gain in March. On a monthly basis, prices rose 0.1%, a slight acceleration after holding steady in March.

The biggest price gains last month were seen in durable goods, which rose 0.5%.

Economists were expecting the PCE price index to rise 0.2% from March and to ease to an annual rate of 2.2%. Spending was expected to slow to 0.4%, according to FactSet.

Inflation is now back at its lowest rate in years, matching a 2.1% gain in September 2024 that was, at the time, a three-and-a-half-year low.

Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, the core PCE price index rose 0.1% from March and slowed to an annual rate of 2.5%, the lowest rate since March 2021.

Inflation is sitting just a hair’s breadth above the Fed’s 2% target; however, there likely will be no victory laps nor corks popped from the Fed: Inflation may have been on a cooling course, but the Trump administration’s tariffs — the bulk of which are in a temporary holding pattern — threaten to reverse that progress.

While the tariffs themselves remain in flux — especially following a US Court of International Trade ruling this week that blocked a large swath of them and a subsequent appeals court ruling that put them back into play — economists weren’t expecting the early wave of import duties to have an immediate effect on prices nor on the April inflation data.

“We’re looking at very backwards-looking data; we’re looking into April, and it’s hard to say (to what extent) the total effects of the tariffs have come through,” Dan North, senior economist at Allianz Trade US, said in an interview with CNN. “I think there’s a reasonable case to be made that each report is not going to be quite so rosy as this.”

There have been significant shifts in tariff policy, and some of the most aggressive duties were curtailed or paused; businesses front-loaded purchases, building up their pre-tariff inventory; and some costs from the initial waves of new tariffs might have been absorbed by retailers and manufacturers.

The latest data lands at a time when uncertainty is swelling about the extent to which Trump’s sweeping policies — including efforts to tack steep tariffs on most imported goods — could upend global order and the US economy.

But that massive uncertainty caused by Trump’s policies could negatively ripple through the economy by affecting how consumers and businesses spend.

“Uncertainty is an actual driving force in the economy, and on the business side, they’re shaking their heads saying, ‘we don’t know what to do; our customers are cutting their orders,’” North said. “Given that atmosphere and this continuous changing in the tariff situation, I see hiring really slowing down in the next couple of months.”

This story is developing and will be updated.