WASHINGTON - July 15, 2026 - PRLog -- Creative Investment Research today released a new analysis of the June 2026 Producer Price Index (PPI), finding that while producer prices declined for the first time in several months, Black- and minority-owned firms continue to face significant inflationary pressures from rising service-sector costs, financing expenses, and elevated business input prices.
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Producer Price Index for final demand fell 0.3 percent in June, following increases of 0.6 percent in May and 1.1 percent in April. Despite the monthly decline, producer prices remain 5.5 percent higher than one year ago.
"The June PPI provides some welcome news, particularly for businesses that rely heavily on transportation and energy," said William Michael Cunningham, economist and founder of Creative Investment Research. "However, the report also makes clear that inflation has shifted rather than disappeared. Many minority-owned firms continue to face rising costs for services, financing, and business operations."
The report attributes the decline primarily to a 1.4 percent drop in final demand goods, driven by a 6.4 percent decline in producer energy prices. Gasoline prices fell 12.0 percent, while diesel fuel, jet fuel, and crude petroleum also posted significant declines.
These developments should provide immediate relief for minority-owned businesses operating in:
- Transportation and logistics
- Trucking and delivery services
- Construction and subcontracting
- Distribution and warehousing
- Manufacturing support services
Producer prices for final demand services increased 0.2 percent, while the index for final demand less foods, energy, and trade services—a closely watched measure of underlying business cost pressures—rose 0.1 percent during June and 5.1 percent over the past year.
Creative Investment Research also notes that the June PPI complements the June Consumer Price Index released one day earlier. Together, the reports indicate that declining energy prices markets. However, the firm cautions that inflation remains well above historical norms and continues to affect industries where minority-owned businesses are heavily concentrated.
The report argues that the latest inflation data strengthen the economic case for expanding Minority Business Enterprise participation in regional and national supply chains.
"Recent inflation has demonstrated the value of resilient, diversified supplier networks," Cunningham said. "Minority Business Enterprises increase supplier competition, reduce supply-chain concentration, shorten transportation distances, and expand domestic productive capacity. Those characteristics help reduce inflationary pressures over time while making supply chains more resilient."
See: https://www.impactinvesting.online/2026/07/june-2026-producer-price-index-welcome.html
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Source: Creative Investment Research
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