Following cooler than expected CPI from Germany and Spain yesterday, the aggregate euro-zone inflation cooled more than expected this morning with headline CPI tumbling from +2.9% in October to +2.4% in November. Core CPI – that excludes volatile components including fuel and food – also moderated for a fourth month, to 3.6%.
Source: Bloomberg
The decline in inflation was dominated by Energy deflation…
And inflation is slowing across all of Europe…
However, inflation is likely to tick higher before returning to target due to statistical effects and the wind-down of measures deployed last year by governments to offset soaring energy prices.
President Christine Lagarde has warned price gains may quicken “slightly” in the coming months and Bloomberg Economics’ Nowcast for December points to a reading of 3.2%.
And this has raised expectations for ECB rate-cuts next year, bringing forward expectations for the first cut from May to April…
Source: Bloomberg
Additionally, markets are betting on four quarter-point reductions in 2024 – up from three last week – and are assigning a 70% chance of a fifth, which would bring the deposit rate back to 2.75% from a record 4% currently.
ECB officials are adamant, however, that monetary policy must remain tight to ensure inflation makes it all the way back to 2%.
By Zerohedge.com
Robert Johnson is a UK-based business writer specializing in finance and entrepreneurship. With an eye for market trends and a keen interest in the corporate world, he offers readers valuable insights into business developments.