A 238-basis-point gap between Truflation's real-time CPI at 1.82% and the BLS's 4.20% reading is raising questions about which inflation picture policymakers should trust.
A 238-basis-point gap between Truflation's real-time CPI at 1.82% and the BLS's 4.20% reading is raising questions about which inflation picture policymakers should trust.

A 238-basis-point gap between Truflation's real-time CPI at 1.82% and the BLS's 4.20% reading is raising questions about which inflation picture policymakers should trust.
The divergence between Truflation's real-time CPI index at 1.82% and the Bureau of Labor Statistics' 4.20% reading for May represents the widest gap between the two measures since Truflation began publishing, challenging the official narrative of persistent inflation. The BLS figure, released in June, marked the fastest annual pace in three years, driven largely by energy costs after the U.S.-Iran conflict pushed oil prices higher.
"The discrepancy is too large to ignore — it suggests either the official data is overstating inflation or the alternative measure is missing key components," said Chris Martin, senior economist at Glassdoor. "For the Fed, the choice of which number to believe has direct implications for the path of interest rates."
Truflation's methodology draws on millions of real-time transaction data points across more than 10 million items, updating daily rather than monthly. The BLS's Consumer Price Index relies on a fixed basket of goods surveyed monthly, with shelter costs — which carry a roughly one-third weighting — based on rental surveys that lag by as much as six months. That lag has become particularly problematic as energy prices surged: gasoline costs rose 12% in the three months through May, according to BLS data, while Truflation's real-time fuel tracker showed a more modest 7% increase over the same period.
The stakes are significant for monetary policy. If Truflation's lower reading is more accurate, it would suggest the Fed's restrictive stance is already tighter than necessary, potentially justifying rate cuts sooner than markets currently price. If the BLS figure is correct, the central bank may need to maintain or even increase rates to contain price pressures. The divergence also has implications for inflation-indexed bonds, with the 10-year breakeven rate — the difference between nominal and inflation-protected Treasury yields — oscillating between 2.10% and 2.45% over the past month as investors weigh conflicting signals.
Why the Methodologies Diverge
The gap between real-time and official inflation measures has widened before during periods of rapid price change, but never to this extent. During the 2021-2022 inflation surge, Truflation's readings also ran below BLS data, though the gap averaged roughly 100 basis points. The current 238-basis-point chasm reflects the unique nature of the present cycle: energy-driven inflation from the Iran conflict has pushed official CPI higher, while Truflation's real-time data may be capturing the disinflationary effects of cooling demand in other categories more quickly.
Shelter costs are the single largest contributor to the divergence. The BLS's measure of owners' equivalent rent — which accounts for roughly 25% of the CPI basket — has remained stubbornly elevated, running at about 5% annually. Truflation's alternative housing metrics, which incorporate real-time lease data and rental listings, show a significantly lower figure, reflecting the actual softening in rental markets that official surveys have yet to capture. New lease data from Apartment List shows asking rents fell 0.8% year-over-year in May, a decline that the BLS's survey-based methodology will take months to fully reflect.
What This Means for Markets
For bond markets, the data gap creates an unusual uncertainty premium. The 10-year Treasury yield has oscillated between 4.10% and 4.35% over the past month as investors weigh conflicting inflation signals. The dollar index has also been volatile, with the DXY swinging between 104 and 106 as traders adjust their Fed policy expectations. The S&P 500 has moved in a 3% range over the same period, with rate-sensitive sectors like real estate and utilities underperforming as the inflation debate remains unresolved.
The IMF's latest World Economic Outlook, released this week, lowered its 2026 global growth forecast to 3%, citing persistent inflation and geopolitical risks. If the Truflation data gains credibility among institutional investors, it could fuel expectations of a less hawkish Fed and boost risk assets. Conversely, the disparity could trigger debates about data reliability and monetary policy misalignment, potentially causing volatility in bonds, currencies, and equities as traders reassess inflation expectations. The next BLS CPI release for June is scheduled for July 16, which will provide the next official data point in this debate.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.