March CPI Ran Hot. Why Business Loan Rates Did Not React.

Data as of:

March 2026 headline CPI came in at +0.87% month-over-month, driven almost entirely by a gasoline spike, while core inflation decelerated. Short-term funding rates, Treasury yields, inflation breakevens, and credit spreads barely moved. This brief examines why markets treated the print as a supply shock rather than a policy shock and what it means for variable-rate borrowers.

What changed for borrowers after March CPI? Essentially nothing, for now. March headline CPI surprised to the upside at +0.87% month-over-month and +3.29% year-over-year, driven almost entirely by a 21.23% jump in gasoline prices. Short-term funding markets did not follow: Prime held at 6.75%, the 2-Year Treasury yield moved 3 basis points on release day and zero basis points net through April 16, and BBB corporate spreads actually tightened. For borrowers with variable-rate debt, the near-term rate picture is unchanged.

Key Metrics at a Glance

  • Headline CPI (Mar): +0.87% MoM, +3.29% YoY
  • Core CPI (Mar): +0.20% MoM, +2.67% YoY
  • Gasoline (Mar): +21.23% MoM
  • 2Y Treasury (Apr 9 to Apr 16): 3.78% to 3.78%, net 0 bps
  • Prime Rate: 6.75%, unchanged
  • BBB Corporate OAS: 1.05% to 1.01%, tightened 4 bps

Key Takeaways

  • Markets priced March CPI as a supply shock, not a policy shock. The 2-Year Treasury yield, the cleanest near-term read on Fed path expectations, ended the week flat.
  • The headline print was a gasoline story. Core CPI actually decelerated slightly month-over-month, from +0.22% in February to +0.20% in March.
  • Long-run inflation expectations stayed anchored. The 5-Year breakeven held near 2.56% and the 5Y5Y forward measure rose only 4 basis points.
  • BBB credit spreads tightened through the release window, the opposite of what a regime-change response would produce.
  • Variable-rate borrowers see no change in carrying costs: Prime is unchanged, SOFR is within 10 basis points of its pre-release level, and SBA 7(a) floating rates reprice off Prime.
  • The actual risk for borrowers is a core re-acceleration in the next CPI release, not the March headline itself.

What Moved: A Gasoline Print, Not an Inflation Regime

Headline CPI accelerated sharply between February and March. Month-over-month, the index went from +0.27% to +0.87%. Year-over-year, the reading jumped from +2.43% to +3.29%. That is the print that drove the headlines.

The composition tells a different story. Core CPI, which strips food and energy, rose only +0.20% on the month and +2.67% year-over-year. Energy, in contrast, jumped +10.87%, led by a +21.23% surge in gasoline. Utility piped gas service fell 0.87% on the month, and electricity rose 0.75%. The inflation impulse is concentrated in the liquid fuels channel, not in broader goods, services, or shelter.

MeasureFebruary 2026 MoMMarch 2026 MoMMarch 2026 YoY
Headline CPI+0.27%+0.87%+3.29%
Core CPI (ex food, energy)+0.22%+0.20%+2.67%
Energy indexn/a+10.87%+11.32%
Gasoline (all types)n/a+21.23%+18.92%
Food indexn/a+0.01%+3.06%
Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Consumer Price Index release for March 2026 (published April 10, 2026).

What Did Not Move: Short-Term Funding, Treasuries, and Credit

The 2-Year Treasury yield is the instrument markets use to price the near-term Fed policy path. A CPI print that genuinely threatened the Fed's trajectory would typically move the 2-Year 15 to 25 basis points within hours. March CPI moved it 3 basis points on release day and zero basis points net through April 16.

2-Year Treasury Yield Around March CPI Release 2-Year Treasury Yield Around March CPI Release Daily close, April 6 to April 16, 2026 3.70% 3.75% 3.80% 3.85% 3.90% March CPI +0.87% MoM released 8:30 AM ET 3.84% 3.81% 3.78% 04/06 04/07 04/08 04/09 04/10 04/13 04/14 04/15 04/16 Headline CPI came in hot on April 10. The 2-year yield moved 3 basis points on the day, zero basis points net through April 16.
Source: U.S. Department of the Treasury, Daily Treasury Par Yield Curve Rates. FRED Series DGS2.

The pattern extends across the curve. The 5-Year Treasury closed April 16 at 3.91%, unchanged from the pre-release level. The 10-Year added 3 basis points net, closing at 4.32%. The 10Y minus 2Y spread steepened a modest 4 basis points from 0.51 to 0.55. Short-term funding markets behaved the same way: Prime held at 6.75%, and SOFR drifted from 3.57% to 3.67% across the period, well within ordinary daily variation.

Credit did not confirm a regime shift either. BBB corporate option-adjusted spreads, a standard gauge of investment-grade credit risk, moved from 1.05% on April 9 to 1.01% on April 16. Spreads tightened. A market pricing a higher-for-longer policy response to persistent inflation would be widening credit spreads, not compressing them.

Why Markets Read This as a Supply Shock

The 2-Year Treasury is the single cleanest indicator of near-term Fed path expectations, and it closed the week unchanged. That is the core of the "no reaction" story. Traders who saw a 3.29% headline CPI print and a 21.23% gasoline spike had every opportunity to reprice the front end of the curve; they did not.

Confirmation comes from two independent market segments pointing the same direction. Inflation breakevens held firm: the 5-Year breakeven ended April 17 at 2.56%, and the 5Y5Y forward measure, which captures long-run expectations, sat at 2.16%. Investment-grade credit spreads tightened over the same window. Breakevens track expected inflation; credit spreads track expected default risk. Both held steady or improved. For a fuller decomposition of how these benchmarks feed into actual loan pricing, see our analysis of borrower spreads versus benchmark rates.

Market Indicators, April 9 to April 17

IndicatorPre-CPIMost RecentNet Change
2Y Treasury3.78%3.78%0 bps
5Y Treasury3.91%3.91%0 bps
10Y Treasury4.29%4.32%+3 bps
5Y Breakeven2.56%2.56%0 bps
5Y5Y Forward2.12%2.16%+4 bps
BBB Corporate OAS1.05%1.01%-4 bps
Prime Rate6.75%6.75%0 bps

Structurally, the Fed looks through energy because gasoline prices are volatile and often reverse quickly; a month-over-month spike in refined fuel is not a signal about the trajectory of wages, services, or shelter. Core CPI, the measure the FOMC monitors most closely, decelerated slightly from February to March. For more on how the benchmark most directly tied to business loans is set, see how the Prime Rate is determined.

Borrower Implications

Variable-rate debt: Borrowers with a business line of credit, a floating-rate SBA 7(a) loan, or a working capital loan priced off Prime see no change in carrying cost. A $500,000 line at Prime + 2.00% remains at 8.75%, carrying about $3,646 of monthly interest on a fully drawn balance. The April CPI print did not reprice this loan.

Fixed-rate products: Quotes on fixed commercial term loans track the belly of the Treasury curve. The 5-Year and 10-Year moved a combined 3 basis points net, so current fixed quotes are holding. Borrowers considering a lock do not face a material cost of waiting for the April 28-29 FOMC, but they also do not face a material benefit. The decision to lock should turn on business certainty, not on an expected near-term rate move.

Near-term planning: The April 10 CPI release did not change the rate environment summarized in our most recent borrowing cost snapshot. Prime, SOFR, and Treasury yields remain in the range quoted there.

What to Watch

The next FOMC meeting is April 28-29, 2026, with the statement released at 2:00 PM ET on April 29. This is not a projection meeting, so there will be no dot plot; Committee language around energy versus core trajectory will carry the signal. The more consequential data point is the April CPI release, expected around May 13. A core re-acceleration, particularly in shelter and services, would be the trigger to watch, not a second gasoline-driven headline.

The market signals that would shift the outlook are specific: a 2-Year Treasury yield move of 15 basis points or more, a 5Y5Y forward breakeven rising above 2.30% (roughly 15 basis points above today's 2.16% reading), or BBB spreads widening beyond 1.15%. None of those are in evidence today. For borrowers monitoring lender posture alongside rate benchmarks, our credit box watch tracks the qualitative side of the same signal.

With Prime and SOFR unchanged through the March CPI headlines, current rate quotes remain valid for near-term financing decisions.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Does a hot CPI print mean my variable-rate loan payment is going up?

Not on its own. Variable business loan rates are typically tied to the Prime Rate or to SOFR, both of which move in response to Federal Reserve policy, not directly to CPI. The March 2026 CPI print did not change the policy path: Prime held at 6.75% and SOFR sat at 3.67% a week after release. Your payment only moves when the benchmark your loan references moves.

Why did the Fed not react to a CPI print above 3%?

The Federal Reserve focuses on core inflation and long-run expectations, not on month-to-month energy swings. Core CPI rose only +0.20% in March, and 5-Year and 5Y5Y forward inflation breakevens stayed near 2.56% and 2.16% respectively. Gasoline prices are volatile and mean-reverting, so a single monthly spike does not by itself indicate a shift in the underlying inflation trajectory.

What would actually move my Prime-based loan rate?

A change in the Federal Funds target range set by the FOMC. Prime sits a fixed 3.00% above the upper bound of the Fed Funds range and moves only when the Fed moves. The relevant signals to watch are the 2-Year Treasury yield (a 15 basis point move or more reflects repriced Fed expectations), 5Y5Y forward breakevens rising above 2.30%, and BBB credit spreads widening past 1.15%. None of these thresholds were breached by the March CPI print.

Should I lock in a fixed rate before the next FOMC?

The April 28-29, 2026 FOMC meeting is not a projection meeting, so no dot plot will be released. The 5-Year and 10-Year Treasury yields, which drive fixed commercial loan pricing, closed April 16 at 3.91% and 4.32% respectively, essentially unchanged since before the CPI release. The cost of waiting through the meeting is modest in either direction. The decision to lock should turn on business certainty and loan timing, not on an expected near-term rate move.

When is the next CPI release?

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes CPI monthly. The April 2026 CPI data is expected to be released around May 13, 2026. That release is the more consequential data point for borrowers. A core re-acceleration, particularly in shelter and services, would be the signal that could shift Fed expectations and, eventually, variable loan rates.

Data Sources & Methodology
  1. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics - Consumer Price Index, March 2026 - Headline CPI, core CPI, energy, gasoline, food, utility gas, and electricity month-over-month and year-over-year changes for March 2026.
  2. Federal Reserve Board - H.15 Selected Interest Rates - Prime Rate daily observations, SOFR daily rate, Federal Funds target range and effective rate, April 7 through April 17, 2026.
  3. U.S. Department of the Treasury - Daily Treasury Par Yield Curve Rates - 2-Year, 5-Year, and 10-Year Treasury yields daily, April 9 through April 17, 2026.
  4. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis - Inflation Compensation from Treasury Inflation Indexed Securities - 5-Year and 10-Year inflation breakevens and 5Y5Y forward inflation expectation, April 9 through April 17, 2026.
  5. ICE Data Indices - BofA US Corporate BBB Option-Adjusted Spread - BBB corporate OAS daily values, April 9 through April 16, 2026.
  6. Federal Reserve Board - FOMC Calendar 2026 - April 28-29, 2026 and June 16-17, 2026 FOMC meeting dates and statement release times.

Analysis based on the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics CPI release for March 2026, the Federal Reserve Board's H.15 Selected Interest Rates, U.S. Treasury Daily Par Yield Curve Rates, and ICE BofA corporate credit spread indices. Yield, rate, breakeven, and spread figures were retrieved via the FRED API. All figures are official reported values, not modeled. Market observations reflect conditions as of April 17, 2026 and may change rapidly. This analysis is for informational purposes and does not constitute financial advice. FRED API terms: "This product uses the FRED API but is not endorsed or certified by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis."

This article was drafted with AI assistance and reviewed for accuracy.

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