Stock Markets April 7, 2026

BofA Sees Sharp March CPI Rise as Energy Costs Spike Amid Iran Conflict

Bank of America forecasts a 0.9% monthly headline CPI surge driven by a large monthly energy price jump; core measures show smaller but elevated gains

By Leila Farooq
BofA Sees Sharp March CPI Rise as Energy Costs Spike Amid Iran Conflict

Bank of America projects headline consumer price index (CPI) will climb 0.9% month-over-month in March, led by a 10.6% monthly increase in energy prices attributed to the Iran war. Core CPI is expected to rise 0.3% month-over-month, equivalent to a 3.1% annualized pace that remains above Federal Reserve-consistent levels for core PCE. The bank also forecasts modest increases in used car prices, core goods and core services, and expects core personal consumption expenditures to cool on a monthly basis but rise year-over-year due to base effects.

Key Points

  • BofA forecasts headline CPI to rise 0.9% month-over-month in March, led by a 10.6% monthly surge in energy prices linked to the Iran war.
  • Core CPI is expected to increase 0.3% month-over-month, an annualized 3.1% pace that remains above levels consistent with the Fed's 2% core PCE target; used cars, core goods and core services are cited as contributors.
  • BofA projects core PCE will rise 0.20% month-over-month, slowing from a three-month average of 0.37% but rising to a 3.1% year-over-year rate because of base effects.

Bank of America projects a sharp acceleration in headline consumer inflation for March, forecasting a 0.9% month-over-month increase in the Consumer Price Index. The firm attributes the bulk of that rise to energy, where it expects prices to jump 10.6% on a monthly basis in connection with the Iran war.

On the underlying measure that excludes food and energy, BofA's forecast calls for core CPI to increase 0.3% month-over-month. The bank translates that monthly rise into a 3.1% annualized rate, a pace it notes is still above the level typically consistent with the Federal Reserve's 2% core personal consumption expenditures target.

Breaking down contributors to the core reading, BofA expects used cars to be one source of upward pressure, projecting a 1.0% month-over-month rise that would add roughly 0.23% to core goods. Core services are forecast to climb 0.28% on the month. Within services, shelter costs are expected to remain comparatively stable, reflecting what BofA describes as cooler rent inflation.

While energy-driven moves in headline inflation are pronounced, the bank cautions that March may be too soon to see large spillovers from the Iran conflict into core inflation measures. BofA analysts said they will watch airfares and delivery services closely for early signs that higher oil prices are passing through into broader categories of consumer prices.

Using its CPI and producer price index projections, Bank of America estimates core personal consumption expenditures (PCE) inflation will rise 0.20% month-over-month in March, a slowdown from its estimated trailing three-month average of 0.37%. Despite the monthly cooling, BofA expects the year-over-year core PCE rate to increase to 3.1%, driven by base effects.

The bank also notes that this set of projections is unlikely to satisfy Federal Reserve policymakers who take a hawkish view, given the persistent strength in the labor market combined with upside risks to inflation noted in its outlook.


Methodology note: The projections above are derived from Bank of America's CPI and producer price index forecasts as described by the bank's analysts.

Risks

  • Risk that higher energy prices feed into core inflation through categories such as airfares and delivery services; this could affect transportation and logistics sectors.
  • Potential for the inflation outlook to keep Federal Reserve policymakers on edge due to a still-strong labor market and upside inflation risks, which could influence interest-rate sensitive sectors.
  • Uncertainty over the timing and magnitude of core inflation effects from the Iran war, making short-term inflation trends difficult to interpret for markets and policy makers.

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