In February, US core CPI rose 2.5% year-on-year, matching forecasts for the annual reading

    by VT Markets
    /
    Mar 11, 2026
    The US Consumer Price Index excluding food and energy rose 2.5% year on year in February. This matched forecasts of 2.5%. The data refers to core inflation, which removes the effects of food and energy prices. It provides a view of underlying price changes in the economy.

    Core CPI Removes Key Uncertainty

    With the February core CPI coming in exactly as expected at 2.5%, a significant piece of near-term uncertainty has been removed from the market. We believe this will suppress implied volatility across major equity indices in the coming weeks. This makes selling premium an attractive strategy, particularly through short strangles or iron condors on the SPX. The Federal Reserve now has little reason to surprise anyone at its next meeting, reinforcing the market’s “higher for longer” rate expectations. Last week’s jobs report, which showed a solid but not inflationary gain of 195,000 payrolls, further supports the case for the Fed to remain on hold. Traders in interest rate futures should anticipate a period of consolidation, with less volatility in the front end of the curve. This environment is very different from the one we experienced back in 2022 and 2023, when every inflation report could trigger major market swings. Back then, we saw the Cboe Volatility Index (VIX) frequently spike above 25 on CPI surprises. Today, with the VIX hovering around 14, the market is signaling a much calmer reaction to data that is simply meeting expectations. For equity derivative traders, this suggests a range-bound market is the most likely outcome for the rest of March. We see this as an opportunity to structure positions that profit from time decay and stable prices. This could involve selling call spreads on recent high-flyers or constructing calendar spreads on broad market ETFs like the SPY.

    Positioning For Range Bound Conditions

    Ultimately, this steady inflation print, while still above the Fed’s 2% target, confirms the slow grind down we have been witnessing. It aligns with recent commentary from Fed governors emphasizing a patient, data-dependent approach. Therefore, we should not position for a major breakout or breakdown but rather for continued stability until the next significant data catalyst. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.

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