Euro inflation set to increase in February – but to remain in deflation


HICP inflation in Germany, Italy and Spain all surprised on the upside in February. On average, the actual prints were 0.4pp higher than forecast by consensus. The higherthan- expected inflation figures seemed to reflect the increase in the oil price during February, which has lifted gasoline prices and thus supported energy price inflation. Added to this it also seemed that food price inflation was higher than expected.

Based on the country figures released today, we expect euro inflation to increase to -0.2% y/y in February from -0.6% y/y in January (due for release on Monday). Hence, the euro area should remain in deflation in the near term, but the country figures released today suggest the period of deflation will be shorter than we had initially expected.

The relatively large, positive surprise reflects that food and energy price inflation are very volatile and account for the largest share of the absolute monthly variation in annual inflation. Energy price inflation explains above 50% of the monthly variation in annual headline inflation although it only has a weight of 10% of headline inflation.

German HICP inflation increased to -0.1% y/y in February from -0.5% y/y in January. The increase was rather broad based with higher inflation in the volatile energy and food prices and also in the core components. Looking at the monthly changes, there was an increase in household energy and fuels of 2.1% in February after a decline above 3.0% in both January and December.

Italian HICP inflation printed at +0.1% y/y in February, hence the country was not in deflation in February. In January inflation was -0.5% y/y and the 0.6pp increase followed a combination of higher food and energy price inflation. Housing, water, electricity and fuel prices increased 0.1% m/m, which was larger than we had expected. At the same time food prices increased again in February and the yearly change turned positive.

Spanish HICP inflation increased to -1.2% y/y in February from -1.5% y/y in January. In Spain the details have not been released yet, but there has been an increase in gasoline prices during February and we expect the higher inflation figure to reflect higher energy price inflation.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD hovers around 1.0700 ahead of German IFO survey

EUR/USD hovers around 1.0700 ahead of German IFO survey

EUR/USD is consolidating recovery gains at around 1.0700 in the European morning on Wednesday. The pair stays afloat amid strong Eurozone business activity data against cooling US manufacturing and services sectors. Germany's IFO survey is next in focus. 

EUR/USD News

GBP/USD steadies near 1.2450, awaits mid-tier US data

GBP/USD steadies near 1.2450, awaits mid-tier US data

GBP/USD is keeping its range at around 1.2450 in European trading on Wednesday. A broadly muted US Dollar combined with a risk-on market mood lend support to the pair, as traders await the mid-tier US Durable Goods data for further trading directives. 

GBP/USD News

Gold: Defending $2,318 support is critical for XAU/USD

Gold: Defending $2,318 support is critical for XAU/USD

Gold price is nursing losses while holding above $2,300 early Wednesday, stalling its two-day decline, as traders look forward to the mid-tier US economic data for fresh cues on the US Federal Reserve interest rates outlook.

Gold News

Crypto community reacts as BRICS considers launching stablecoin for international trade settlement

Crypto community reacts as BRICS considers launching stablecoin for international trade settlement

BRICS is intensifying efforts to reduce its reliance on the US dollar after plans for its stablecoin effort surfaced online on Tuesday. Most people expect the stablecoin to be backed by gold, considering BRICS nations have been accumulating large holdings of the commodity.

Read more

Three fundamentals for the week: US GDP, BoJ and the Fed's favorite inflation gauge stand out Premium

Three fundamentals for the week: US GDP, BoJ and the Fed's favorite inflation gauge stand out

While it is hard to predict when geopolitical news erupts, the level of tension is lower – allowing for key data to have its say. This week's US figures are set to shape the Federal Reserve's decision next week – and the Bank of Japan may struggle to halt the Yen's deterioration. 

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures