Continuum Economics
  • Search
  • About Us
  • Buy
  • Invite A Friend
  • My Basket
  • Articles
  • Calendar
  • Forecasts
  • Events
  • Data
  • Newsletters
  • My Alerts
  • Community
  • Directory
  • About Us
  • Buy
  • Invite A Friend
  • My Basket
  • Articles
    • All
    • Thematic
    • Tactical
    • Asia
    • EMEA
    • Americas
    • Newsletters
    • Freemium
    • Editor's Choice
    • Most Viewed
    • Most Shared
    • Most Liked
  • Calendar
    • Interactive
      • China
      • United States
      • Eurozone
      • United Kingdom
    • Month Ahead
    • Reviews
    • Previews
  • Forecasts
    • Forecasts
    • Key Views
  • Events
    • Media
    • Conference Calls
  • Data
    • Country Insights
    • Shadow Credit Ratings
    • Full CI Data Download
  • Newsletters
  • My Alerts
  • Community
    • FX
    • Fixed Income
    • Macro Strategy
    • Credit Markets
    • Equities
    • Commodities
    • Precious Metals
    • Renewables
  • Directory
  • My Account
  • Notifications Setup
  • Administration Panel
  • Account Details
  • Recent Devices
  • Distribution Lists
  • Shared Free Trials
  • Saved Articles
  • Shared Alerts
  • My Posts
Published: 2024-05-31T09:42:16.000Z

EZ HICP Review: Core Disinflation Unwinds as Services Resilience Persists?

byAndrew Wroblewski

Senior Economist Western Europe , UK, Eurozone
8

Very much having affected ECB thinking, there has been repeated positive EZ news in the form of falling EZ HICP inflation and somewhat broadly so. This abated last month and even more so in these May numbers, with the headline moving up from the unchanged 2.4% reading to a three-month high of 2.6%, an outcome that exceeded consensus thinking.  More notable perhaps was that the core moved back up by 0.2 ppt from a 27-mth low of 2.7%, largely reflecting a surprise jump in back in services inflation).  Clearly this latter figure will be troubling some Council members’ worries about aspects of price resilience not least as monthly seasonally adjusted numbers have also shown some such resilience, if not revival, notably on both a core and services basis. In addition, the data do suggest ECB Q2 HICP projections may be overshot.  But given what the ECB has hinted in terms of a softer wage picture having emerged, we do not think these numbers will derail the widely flagged ECB easing next Thursday but will certainly make the Council even more unwilling to offer firm(er) policy guidance for H2, let alone into next year.

Figure 1: Higher Headline and Core Inflation?

Source: Eurostat, CE

Indeed, and very disappointedly, the May HICP data encompassed an unexpected jump in services inflation, rising back to 4.1% from to 3.7%, a 21-mth low, this only partly reflecting base effects and more indicative of a genuine underlying rise.  Energy inflation turned positive (partly due to higher petrol costs which now seem to have reversed) while unprocessed food price inflation s further.  In perspective, given the

Figure 2: Smoothed Services m/m Price Pressures Resilient?

Source: ECB, CE, smoothed is 3 mth mov avg

As for underlying trends, it is notable that the ECB has been somewhat troubled by the failure of services inflation to have fallen in the last few months, and its apparent stability in m/m adjusted terms may harden some of the hawks worries about aspects of price resilience as may monthly adjusted core numbers (Figure 2) which have also shown some such resilience, if not revival.  As a result, the data do not make the case for rapid ECB easing any greater; we still see three 25 bp cuts this year with a move in next week still very much on the cards, especially given wage data (compiled by Indeed) which has pointed to a clear and further easing in such cost pressures, actually more clearly than the ECB had anticipated.

Figure 3: Wage Pressures Easing?

Source: ECB, CE, Indeed, % chg y/y

Below-Target Inflation Still Looming in H2

On the basis of a presumed unchanged headline reading for June, it now looks as if HICP inflation will average 2.5% in Q2, just a notch above ECB projections made in March. These will be updated next week and will now encompassing the slight fall back in oil/petrol prices seen of late.  We still envisage that the headline slip below target temporarily in late-summer 2024, well over a year earlier than the ECB currently envisages officially, and then undershoot more durably through 2025, while the core should continue to fall in the interim regardless.  The ECB’s updated projections may be more circumspect, but should still adhere to a below target forecast I n H2 next year, thereby validating market rate speculation. 

 

 

 

 

 

Continue to read the article for free
Login

or

or

Topics
DM Central Banks
DM Country Research
European Central Bank
Eurozone
Free Thematic
Continuum Daily
FRANCE
GERMANY
ITALY
SPAIN

GENERAL

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Our Team
  • Careers

LEGAL

  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Compliance
  • GDPR

GET IN TOUCH

  • Contact Us
Continuum Economics
The Technical Analyst Awards Winner 2021
The Technical Analyst Awards Finalist 2020
image