EU Inflation Eases On Cheaper Foods

Today, we received inflation data from the European Union. The data showed that inflation grew less than what analysts were expecting. The data from Eurostat showed that inflation grew by 1.1%. This was down from the analysts’ forecast of 1.3%. A year ago, this inflation data was at 2.0%.

The Year on Year core inflation remained unchanged at 1.0%, while the MoM core inflation was in line with the analysts’ forecast of 0.2%.

Among the EU countries, the lowest inflation rate was in Cyprus which had an inflation rate of -0.4%, Greece which had 0.4%, and Denmark which had inflation of 0.5%. The highest inflation rate was in Romania, Estonia, and Lithuania, which had an inflation rate of 3.8% and 3.2% respectively. The chart below shows the contribution of each country to the overall region’s inflation rate.

In the month, the biggest contributor to the inflation was from services which contributed 0.57 percentage point. This was followed by food, alcohol & tobacco, and energy which contributed 0.21% each. Non-energy industrial goods contributed 0.14%.

The general CPI went down to 1.1% from last month’s 1.2%. The decline was caused by low unprocessed food products which fell by 0.3% MoM and at an annualized rate of 0.9%. At the same time, energy prices declined by 0.3% on the month. On an annualized basis, the prices of energy products rose by 2.1%. Year to date, the benchmark Brent crude is up by about 3%.

(Click on image to enlarge)

The ECB watches closely the inflation numbers because its key mandate is to ensure price stability. An increase in inflation rate may lead the ECB to intervene by raising interest rates in a bid to limit the purchasing power. However, as seen above, the overall inflation for the region has remained comfortably below 2%, which is the target for the ECB.

Officials believe that the inflation will remain stable this year, partly because of a stronger euro. This will partly be due to higher energy prices and a stronger euro. Year to date, the euro has gained by more than 3% against the dollar.

Meanwhile, the Fed will have its meeting on Tuesday and announce its interest rate decision on Wednesday. It is widely expected that the Fed will raise rates to 1.75%. This is in line with the statement from the new Fed chair, Jerome Powell who has signaled four hikes this year. Data released this week showed that the country’s inflation eased in February while the data released a week ago showed that more people were getting jobs.

Other central banks will also meet next week. The Bank of England will meet and issue its interest rate decision. Already, the bank has indicated that no hike will be announced. The same is true with the Reserve Bank of New Zealand which will meet in the following week. This will come after the country announced weak GDP numbers.

Disclaimer: The information found on forex.info are intended only to be educational, is not advice nor a recommendation and thus should not be treated as such. We strongly recommend that you ...

more
How did you like this article? Let us know so we can better customize your reading experience.

Comments

Leave a comment to automatically be entered into our contest to win a free Echo Show.