Prices feel higher again. You’re not imagining it.

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Does it feel like prices are climbing again almost everywhere you look?

Gas. Groceries. Travel. Insurance. Dinner out.

If you’ve been wondering, “Is it just me, or are things getting expensive again?,” the latest inflation reports say you’re not imagining it.

The Consumer Price Index, which tracks what households pay for a broad mix of goods and services, rose 3.8% over the last year in April. That was the highest annual pace since May 2023.¹

Then came the Producer Price Index, which measures prices businesses receive for goods and services. Think of it as inflation earlier in the pipeline, before some of those costs potentially make their way to consumers.

That report showed wholesale prices jumped 6% from a year earlier, the biggest annual increase since 2022.²

In plain English?

Prices are rising in two important places: what consumers are already paying and what businesses are paying behind the scenes.

That matters because businesses probably won’t absorb higher costs forever. Some of those increases might eventually show up in the prices households pay.

And with inflation still running above the Federal Reserve’s target, hopes for near-term interest rate cuts are fading.³

So, yes. Higher prices may stick around longer than many people hoped.

Borrowing costs may stay elevated, too.

That can feel frustrating, even if your finances are in good shape.

Because inflation does more than raise the cost of everyday life.

It can chip away at confidence.

It can make big decisions feel heavier. Retirement timing. Major purchases. Portfolio withdrawals. Cash reserves. Income planning. Suddenly, choices that once felt clear may come with a few more question marks.

A higher-inflation environment can feel like planning a long road trip while your gas mileage keeps changing.

You may still know where you want to go.

You may still have a reliable vehicle.

But if the trip starts taking more fuel than expected, it makes sense to pause, check the route, and make sure the plan still works.

That does not mean you cancel the trip.

It means you stay thoughtful.

Right now, there are plenty of things we cannot control.

We cannot control oil prices. We cannot control the next inflation report. We cannot control what the Federal Reserve does with interest rates. We cannot control geopolitical events or how markets react to the next headline.

But we can control how we respond.

That may mean revisiting your long-term priorities. Reviewing upcoming financial decisions. Looking at whether higher costs have changed key assumptions. Making sure your strategy still gives you flexibility if inflation and rates stay elevated longer than expected.

The goal is not to ignore inflation.

Higher prices are real. They can affect your financial life in real ways.

But periods like this are also a reminder that financial planning is not about reacting perfectly to every headline.

It’s about building a strategy that can adapt when conditions change.

Inflation will eventually cool. Interest rates will eventually change. Markets and economies will continue moving through cycles, just as they always have.

The important thing is being thoughtful, staying flexible, and keeping long-term goals in focus while the noise passes through.

Warmly,

Barry

Sources:

  1. CNBC, 2026 [URL: https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/12/cpi-inflation-april-2026-.html]
  2. CNBC, 2026 [URL: https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/13/ppi-inflation-report-april-2026-.html]
  3. CME Group, 2026 [URL: https://www.cmegroup.com/markets/interest-rates/cme-fedwatch-tool.html]

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“We cannot control the things that happen to us but we can control our reactions to them.”

— Epictetus

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