All roads lead back to Gold
CHANGE CURRENCY:

April CPI Surprise Sends Gold to $4,700 as Energy Costs Surge

Key Gold Headlines | SchiffGold | 13 May, 2026

April’s Consumer Price Index offered scant comfort to households or policymakers, with headline prices rising 0.6 percent for the month and 3.8 percent from a year earlier, according to Wednesday’s Bureau of Labor Statistics release. Though the monthly pace eased from March’s blistering 0.9 percent gain, the yearly rate accelerated, underscoring that the inflation fire is not yet doused. Energy costs once again led the charge, and investors wasted no time hedging: spot gold briefly touched an intraday high of $4,719 per ounce, near a record, as traders digested the hotter-than-expected print.

Energy accounted for more than 40 percent of April’s overall increase. The energy index surged 3.8 percent on the month and 17.9 percent over the past year, fueled by a 5.4 percent jump in gasoline that leaves prices at the pump a punishing 28.4 percent higher than last spring. Electricity bills rose 2.1 percent and are now up 6.1 percent year-over-year; natural-gas service, while down a scant 0.1 percent in April, remains 3 percent above last year’s level. With summer driving season looming and geopolitical tensions still clouding oil supply, few motorists should expect quick relief.

Shelter costs (the single largest CPI component) advanced another 0.6 percent. Rents and owners’ equivalent rents each added 0.5 percent, pushing annual shelter inflation to 3.3 percent. Because housing carries roughly one-third of the CPI’s weight, even incremental increases exert an outsized pull on the headline figure. Food offered no solace either: grocery prices climbed 0.7 percent, driving overall food inflation to 3.2 percent year-over-year. Strip out food and energy and the so-called core CPI still gained 0.4 percent in April, lifting the annual core rate to 2.8 percent—well north of the Federal Reserve’s 2 percent target.…

CPI currency debasement economy Energy Prices Federal Reserve gasoline gold inflation precious metals purchasing power