What changed in today’s producer-price read
The June 11 Producer Price Index release is a reminder that equipment financing is not only about finding a lender.
It is also about protecting the structure before cost pressure narrows the path.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the Producer Price Index for final demand rose 1.1% in May. On an unadjusted basis, final demand prices were 6.5% higher over the 12 months ending in May.
The most useful signal for equipment buyers is not the headline alone. It is the mix underneath it.
Final demand goods rose 2.8% in May. Final demand energy rose 10.7%. Gasoline rose 23.4%, and BLS also noted increases in diesel fuel, jet fuel, plastic resins and materials, industrial chemicals, and natural gas liquids. Final demand transportation and warehousing services rose 2.6%.
Why that matters before equipment orders are locked
For a borrower planning equipment, those categories can show up in several places at once: supplier pricing, freight, installation timing, fuel-sensitive operations, deposits, and the liquidity needed to keep the project moving.
The latest EIA diesel series adds a useful current-context note. National on-highway diesel averaged $5.210 per gallon for the week ending June 8, down from $5.350 the week before and $5.523 for the week ending May 25.
Prices can move while the equipment quote, deposit schedule, delivery window, and lender review are still open.
Where the friction shows up
- supplier quotes that change before purchase orders are final,
- freight, installation, or site-work exposure,
- deposits or progress payments before delivery,
- fuel-sensitive operating costs,
- existing assets that may support liquidity through a sale-leaseback,
- lender concentration or collateral limits, and
- a bank relationship that is useful but too narrow for the full project.
CFP angle
Commercial Funding Partners is most relevant when a company has a real equipment or project need, but the financing path has to account for input costs, freight, delivery timing, collateral, lease structure, lender appetite, or liquidity preservation.
That can include equipment financing, sale-leaseback, operating or tax-lease structures, progress funding, and lender-fit repositioning before the project is locked.
The equipment-finance backdrop is still active
Equipment finance activity is still moving. ELFA’s April CapEx Finance Index showed $10.6 billion in seasonally adjusted new business volume, year-to-date volume up 15.0%, and an average approval rate of 77.1%. ELFA’s May Monthly Confidence Index improved to 59.9, and 26.1% of respondents expected demand for capex leases and loans to increase over the next four months.
In other words: capital is still available for the right projects.
But availability is not the same thing as fit.
Practical takeaway
If cost movement, supplier timing, freight, deposits, or delivery windows can change the economics of the project, bring financing into the decision before the order is fixed.
Equipment financing
Review CFP’s equipment financing page.
Sale-leaseback proof
See CFP’s $36M sale-leaseback case study.
Proof library
See CFP’s case-studies archive.
Source notes
- BLS Producer Price Index, May 2026.
- EIA Weekly U.S. No. 2 Diesel Retail Prices, June 9, 2026 release.
- ELFA CapEx Finance Index, April 2026.
- ELFA Monthly Confidence Index, May 2026.