President Donald Trump decried what he called China’s “massive” intervention to suppress the yuan, portraying the U.S. as the beneficiary of his tariffs on Chinese imports and suggesting -- despite recent evidence to the contrary -- that prices aren’t rising.

“Through massive devaluation of their currency and pumping vast sums of money into their system, the tens of billions of dollars that the U.S. is receiving is a gift from China,” Trump said on Twitter Tuesday. “Prices not up, no inflation. Farmers getting more than China would be spending. Fake News won’t report!”

Data released Tuesday from the Labor Department, shortly before Trump’s tweet, signaled that inflation may be firming. A key measure of U.S. consumer prices unexpectedly accelerated in July in a broad-based advance.

Last week the Trump administration branded China a currency manipulator. The announcement by the U.S. Treasury Department came hours after China allowed the yuan to weaken to more than 7 per dollar, a line it hadn’t crossed in over a decade.

Separate figures from the Treasury Department Monday showed that while income from tariffs imposed by the Trump administration on China are still a modest source of revenue for the U.S., the levies helped almost double customs duties to $57 billion in the fiscal year so far.

This story provided by Bloomberg News.