Eurozone inflation sees surprise rise after 5-month fall

Eurozone inflation sees surprise rise after 5-month fall

The 7% increase in April could further encourage the ECB to raise interest rates.

The European Central Bank has repeatedly increased interest rates since July last year to rein in inflation. (Reuters pic)
BRUSSELS:
Annual inflation in the eurozone rose to 7% in April, the EU’s statistics agency said Tuesday, the first increase after five consecutive months of declines.

Consumer prices edged up from 6.9% in March, which could further encourage the European Central Bank (ECB) to raise interest rates on Thursday. Analysts for FactSet and Bloomberg had predicted the rate would remain stable.

The ECB has hiked rates repeatedly since July last year to rein in red-hot inflation, and analysts expect the Frankfurt-based institution to raise them again, though they are divided on how big the increase will be.

Following Russia’s assault on Ukraine last year, energy prices soared and helped push consumer prices higher across the single currency area, hitting a peak of 10.6% in October.

Inflation later fell thanks to a slowdown in the rate of energy price rises, but it still remains well above the ECB’s 2% target.

Food and drink prices keep climbing, putting pressure on European households, but the pace of the increase slowed to 13.6% in April after 15.5% in March, Eurostat said.

Energy prices increased 2.5% after falling 0.9% in March.

“The unexpected increase is the result of a bounce back in energy price inflation, after the strong negative base effect in March, and slightly higher service price inflation,” ING economist Carsten Brzeski said in a note.

The eurozone’s core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, fell slightly to 5.6% in March from 5.7% a month earlier.

“We expect headline inflation to continue falling, while core inflation will remain sticky,” Brzeski said.

Smaller rate hikes?

Among the 20 countries that use the euro, Luxembourg had the lowest inflation rate, at 2.7% in April, Eurostat said.

The data showed that inflation in Germany, the EU’s biggest economy, slipped to 7.6% in April from 7.8% a month earlier.

But in France, consumer prices rose 6.9% last month after 6.7% in March, Eurostat said.

Many economists say the ECB will opt for a rate increase of 50 basis points on Thursday – as it did at its previous three meetings – while others think it will downshift to 25 basis points.

“Sticky inflation data clearly stresses the need to continue hiking but with last week’s weaker-than-expected GDP growth report and today’s weak loan growth and loan demand data, the case for slowing down the pace and size of rate hikes has become stronger,” said ING’s Brzeski, who expects a 25-basis-point increase.

Capital Economics’ chief Europe economist, Andrew Kenningham, said the figures “do not decisively tip the balance ahead of Thursday’s ECB decision” but added that the ECB could “pull a hawkish surprise by going for a 50bp rather than 25bp hike”.

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