PROTECTED SOURCE SCRIPT
US FED inflation lens - CPI vs Core CPI YoY (FRED)

Description:
This chart overlays Headline CPI YoY and Core CPI YoY (both from FRED) on a single pane, showing the U.S. inflation trajectory in monthly % change. The script smooths the lines (optional) for trend clarity, adds 2% and 3% policy reference levels, and optionally shades the area between headline and core readings to highlight inflation mix shifts. It’s designed to be a macro trigger lens — giving traders an instant read on whether inflation is trending toward or away from central bank comfort zones.
Visual Cues & Why They Matter
1)
CPI & Core CPI Above 3%
Why: Historically a pressure point for tighter Fed policy and higher rates — risk-off for bonds and possibly equities.
Cue: Both lines above the orange dashed 3% line.
2)
CPI & Core CPI Falling Toward 2%
Why: Sign of inflation normalization; often coincides with dovish policy pivots, risk-on for equities.
Cue: Both lines approaching the teal dotted 2% line from above.
3)
Headline Above Core (Blue > Red)
Why: Indicates energy/food price shocks are driving inflation — these are volatile and can reverse quickly.
Cue: Blue area shading above red.
4)
Core Above Headline (Red > Blue)
Why: Suggests inflation is broad-based and sticky — harder for Fed to cut rates.
Cue: Red shading above blue.
5)
Crossovers Between Headline & Core
Why: Often marks shifts in the inflation narrative (e.g., energy-driven to broad-based, or vice versa).
Cue: Shading flips color.
6)
Slope / Momentum Changes
Why: Acceleration upward = inflation heating; acceleration downward = disinflation trend gaining strength.
Cue: Smoothed lines bending sharply up or down.
This chart overlays Headline CPI YoY and Core CPI YoY (both from FRED) on a single pane, showing the U.S. inflation trajectory in monthly % change. The script smooths the lines (optional) for trend clarity, adds 2% and 3% policy reference levels, and optionally shades the area between headline and core readings to highlight inflation mix shifts. It’s designed to be a macro trigger lens — giving traders an instant read on whether inflation is trending toward or away from central bank comfort zones.
Visual Cues & Why They Matter
1)
CPI & Core CPI Above 3%
Why: Historically a pressure point for tighter Fed policy and higher rates — risk-off for bonds and possibly equities.
Cue: Both lines above the orange dashed 3% line.
2)
CPI & Core CPI Falling Toward 2%
Why: Sign of inflation normalization; often coincides with dovish policy pivots, risk-on for equities.
Cue: Both lines approaching the teal dotted 2% line from above.
3)
Headline Above Core (Blue > Red)
Why: Indicates energy/food price shocks are driving inflation — these are volatile and can reverse quickly.
Cue: Blue area shading above red.
4)
Core Above Headline (Red > Blue)
Why: Suggests inflation is broad-based and sticky — harder for Fed to cut rates.
Cue: Red shading above blue.
5)
Crossovers Between Headline & Core
Why: Often marks shifts in the inflation narrative (e.g., energy-driven to broad-based, or vice versa).
Cue: Shading flips color.
6)
Slope / Momentum Changes
Why: Acceleration upward = inflation heating; acceleration downward = disinflation trend gaining strength.
Cue: Smoothed lines bending sharply up or down.
受保护脚本
此脚本以闭源形式发布。 但是,您可以自由使用它,没有任何限制 — 在此处了解更多信息。
免责声明
这些信息和出版物并不意味着也不构成TradingView提供或认可的金融、投资、交易或其它类型的建议或背书。请在使用条款阅读更多信息。
受保护脚本
此脚本以闭源形式发布。 但是,您可以自由使用它,没有任何限制 — 在此处了解更多信息。
免责声明
这些信息和出版物并不意味着也不构成TradingView提供或认可的金融、投资、交易或其它类型的建议或背书。请在使用条款阅读更多信息。