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Sign InIn a move reflecting a tangible improvement in international trade efficiency, Federal Reserve data showed that global supply chain pressures declined during the month of June. This report indicates a continued normalization of logistics and shipping costs. These findings, according to reports from the Fed, track various indicators including delivery times and the overall health of global trade logistics.
This improvement comes at a time when other economic data showed a slowdown in inflation, with France's annual inflation rate hitting 1.8% in June compared to 2.4% in the previous month per market data. Similarly, Germany saw its annual CPI drop to 2.3% from a previous 2.6% per market data. These figures, coinciding with easing supply pressures, reinforce the premise of receding cost-push inflation in major economies.
Looking ahead, investors are watching how this data will influence upcoming monetary policy decisions, especially with unemployment rates stabilizing in major economies like Germany at 6.3% and Japan at 2.5% as of late June 2026 per market data. In the absence of real-time price data for specific instruments related to this report, focus remains on global manufacturing indices to assess the sustainability of this supply chain recovery.