Producer Price Index: All Commodities (PPIACO)

1. PPIACO Measures Inflation at the Production Level, Not the Consumer Level

PPIACO tracks the average change over time in the selling prices that domestic producers receive for all commodities—including raw materials, intermediate goods, and finished goods. It shows inflation pressures earlier in the supply chain, before products reach consumers. If PPIACO rises, producers face higher costs.

These cost increases often pass through to consumers, eventually influencing CPI (Consumer Price Index).

PPI is therefore viewed as a leading indicator of future consumer inflation.

2. PPIACO Influences Business Profit Margins and Corporate Decisions

When the index increases rapidly:

  • businesses’ input costs rise

  • profit margins shrink unless they raise selling prices

  • companies may delay investments or hiring

  • firms may negotiate differently with suppliers or switch sourcing strategies

Conversely, a declining PPIACO signals:

  • lower cost pressures

  • improved margins

  • potential for more stable or lower final pricing

  • reduced inflation expectations for businesses

Producer Price Index by Industry: Total Manufacturing Industries (PCUOMFGOMFG)

  • Overall Index Levels Have Remained Elevated Since the Pandemic Peak

  • Over the last five years, the Total Manufacturing Industries PPI has stayed at historically high levels compared with pre-pandemic hundreds-of-points values, with the index around 255 in late 2025 (Dec 1984 = 100). This shows that prices received by manufacturers for their goods are significantly higher than in earlier decades. Trading Economics

  • This elevated level reflects the aftermath of supply shocks, logistics challenges, and cost increases that began during the COVID-19 period and have not fully retreated.

2. Most of the Post-Pandemic Increase Happened Early, with Slower Growth Recently

  • Data over recent years show that much of the large jump in the manufacturing PPI occurred around 2021–2022, with the index growing rapidly during that period and then moving more moderately afterward. For example:

  • In 2021, the index was about 216,

  • In 2022, it rose near historically high marks,

  • By 2025, it continued higher but at a slower pace around the 250s.

  • This pattern suggests that rapid inflationary pressures eased after the early pandemic surge, though prices remain elevated.

3. Slow Year-Over-Year Increases Reflect Moderating Price Pressures

  • Annual comparisons in the index show relatively modest year-over-year changes in recent periods — for example, only low single-digit annual growth — rather than the double-digit inflation seen earlier in the decade. Beautify Data

  • This indicates that while manufacturers still see higher prices overall than before pandemic disruptions, the pace of increase has slowed, hinting at cooling cost pressures across production inputs and outputs.

4. Manufacturing Sector Conditions Influence Price Movements

  • The manufacturing PPI trend also reflects sector-specific economic conditions such as weak demand, supply chain bottlenecks, and rising input costs — not just general inflation. For instance:

  • Surveys show that U.S. manufacturing activity has faced contraction and slowing output in parts of 2025, with persistent cost pressures and weaker orders. Trading Economics

  • Tariffs and trade uncertainties have kept manufacturing price pressures uneven, contributing to volatility in producer pricing.

  • These broader manufacturing sector dynamics help explain why the PPI for total manufacturing industries has not sharply declined even as headline inflation slowed.

Producer Price Index: Bare Printed Circuit Board Manufacturing (PCU334412334412)

  • The data series Producer Price Index by Industry: Bare Printed Circuit Board Manufacturing (PCU334412334412) is an economic indicator that measures the average change in selling prices received by domestic manufacturers for bare printed circuit boards (PCBs) over time.

  • In simple terms, it tracks inflation or deflation at the factory gate for this specific component before any electronic parts are installed.

Key Materials: Manufacturing a bare board relies heavily on a few critical commodities:

  • Copper: Accounts for 60-70% of raw material costs in a PCB.

  • Gold: Used for surface finishes like ENIG (Electroless Nickel Immersion Gold).

  • Resin and Glass Fiber: Forms the board’s structural layers.