Financial markets enter a concentrated day of data and speeches on Tuesday, April 14, 2026, with the Producer Price Index (PPI) taking center stage. The PPI, which gauges price changes from the vendor perspective and acts as an early indicator of consumer inflationary pressures, is due at 7:30 AM ET and is likely to attract investor attention as markets parse signs about the inflation trajectory and implications for monetary policy.
Key release
- 7:30 AM ET: Producer Price Index (PPI) - Forecast: 1.2%, Previous: 0.7% - Measures the change in prices of goods sold by manufacturers, serving as a leading indicator of consumer inflation.
Additional scheduled items that could influence market positioning
- 4:00 AM ET: IEA Monthly Report - Covers major issues affecting the world oil market and provides an outlook for crude oil market developments.
- 7:15 AM ET: ADP Employment Change Weekly - Previous: 26.00K - Provides the change in private sector employment based on ADP’s high-frequency data.
- 7:30 AM ET: Core PPI - Forecast: 0.5%, Previous: 0.5% - Measures the change in selling prices of goods and services sold by producers, excluding food and energy.
- 11:15 AM ET: Fed Goolsbee Speaks - Federal Reserve official remarks that may provide insights into monetary policy outlook.
- 11:45 AM ET: Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Barr Speaks - Federal Reserve leadership commentary on banking supervision and regulatory matters.
- 3:30 PM ET: API Weekly Crude Stock - Previous: 3.719M - Reports inventory levels of US crude oil, gasoline, and distillates stocks.
Other items on the calendar
- 5:00 AM ET: NFIB Small Business Optimism - Forecast: 98.6, Previous: 98.8 - Composite index indicating the health of small businesses in the United States.
- 5:00 AM ET: IMF Meetings - Annual meetings bringing together central bankers, finance ministers, and development officials to discuss global economic issues.
- 7:30 AM ET: PPI ex. Food/Energy/Trade - Previous: 3.5% - Producer price measure excluding volatile food, energy, and trade components.
- 7:30 AM ET: PPI (Year-over-Year) - Forecast: 4.6%, Previous: 3.4% - Annual change in producer prices.
- 7:30 AM ET: PPI ex. Food/Energy/Trade (Month-over-Month) - Previous: 0.5% - Monthly change in core producer prices.
- 7:30 AM ET: Core PPI (Year-over-Year) - Forecast: 4.2%, Previous: 3.9% - Annual change in core producer prices.
- 7:55 AM ET: Redbook - Previous: 7.6% - Year-over-year same-store sales growth among large US general merchandise retailers.
- 12:00 PM ET: FOMC Member Barkin Speaks - Richmond Fed President remarks that may offer clues regarding future monetary policy direction.
- 12:00 PM ET: Fed Collins Speaks - Federal Reserve official commentary on economic conditions and policy outlook.
Taken together, the morning and midday releases present a concentrated window for market participants to reassess inflation signals, energy balances and labour-market data. The PPI and associated core metrics, multiple Federal Reserve speeches and oil inventory figures are the headline levers that traders and risk managers are likely to monitor closely throughout the day.
Market participants often use the PPI as an early read on inflation trends that can feed into consumer price dynamics. The range of forecasts and previous readings listed for both headline and core PPI metrics will provide the immediate datapoints investors compare to consensus expectations.
Energy market observers will also be watching the IEA monthly report and the API weekly crude stock numbers for signals about crude supply and inventory trends. Likewise, small business sentiment via the NFIB survey and high-frequency private payroll measures such as ADP’s weekly employment change will add layers to the economic picture.
Finally, remarks from Federal Reserve officials scheduled between late morning and midday may offer qualitative context that markets use to frame incoming data. Comments from those policymakers could clarify how officials interpret recent inflation readings and economic momentum.
For a full schedule and the latest updates, consult the official Economic Calendar.